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[[Image:Nuvola apps important.png|25px|left]] 5/28/2013 MIT Retrospective
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[[Image:Nuvola apps important.png|25px|left]] 8/25/2013 Yahoo APM!
 
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This is a special edition of the personal update containing a retrospective on my MIT experience.  I am still adding the other content (work, photos, etc) which I usually talk about in the update, so I am hoping to post a normal update in the next month or so.
 
This is a special edition of the personal update containing a retrospective on my MIT experience.  I am still adding the other content (work, photos, etc) which I usually talk about in the update, so I am hoping to post a normal update in the next month or so.
 
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[[MIT]] was an awesome experience.  I was extremely fortunate to be able to attend.
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[[Category:Site]]
  
===Prequel===
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==Yahoo APM==
I didn't know that I wanted to go to MIT until I applied on a lark my [[12th Grade|senior year]].  Like everyone else who was actually admitted, I didn't think I had a good shot of getting in(Almost everyone at MIT, including our Chancellor, has felt the "imposter" syndrome, in which one feels that one was admitted by mistake.)  I come from a middle class family (65th percentile) in the USMy parents don't work in industries with MIT graduates.  This makes things more challenging, because, in general, students from prodigious backgrounds come to MIT better prepared and leave better off(Prodigious does not necessarily mean family name, or a specific income-level, but working in an area which MIT grads tend to go into.)
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[[File:Marissa and Michael.jpg|thumb|Me with Marissa Mayer]]
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[[File:Yahoo APMs 13.jpg|thumb|The 2013 Yahoo APMs]]
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I am about 1 month into my new job at [[Yahoo]] as an Associate Product Manager or [[APM]].  After I finished classes at MIT, but before I was set to start at Oracle, Yahoo offered me to join Marissa Mayer's new APM program at Yahoo.  Marissa started the program back when she had just joined Google - as a way to find and develop new Product Managers out of school, which she thought would be faster than hiring experienced PMs from the industryThis article describes the role http://www.wired.com/business/2012/07/marissas-secret-weapon-for-recruiting-new-yahoo-talent/ though that article overblows things slightly.
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I’m super happy where I am at.  This is the type of job I was aiming for throughout MIT; I think I was well-prepared by MIT; and I think .Yahoo is also in a very interesting state at the momentThey are rapidly redoing everything.  This makes new grads are handed large chunks of the product to manage, because they are so understaffed for what the need is.  In addition, they are in the midst of a huge culture change.  They are replacing their cube farms with open desks.  They are rebuilding teams, which were previously laid off.  It’s very interesting to work with people on either side of the culture change and to experience the before-and-after at the same time.
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I’m in charge of designing the platform Yahoo uses to know where you are, and I help designing the membership, accounts, and security features of Yahoo.  The work is very similar to what I did at MIT – brainstorming solutions, designing schemes, working with other stakeholders to refine plans and achieve consensus.
  
When I was admitted, I was surprised, and I was unsure if I actually wanted to attend"Too geeky" I wrote on my initial visit sheet.  I spoke with my admissions officer for an hour where he said that he thinks I would "invent something great." Senior year of high school I had said that I wanted to study how computers and people interact.  I was initially targeting an information science program.  Even later on at MIT, I signed up for management first; I initially didn't sign up for computer science, till I took 6.01 and enjoyed it.  I initially thought computer science would be too difficult to mater.
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As an APM, I’m part of Yahoo’s inner circle – giving it the feel of a small companyMy experience working with administrators at MIT prepared me very well for working with the executives at YahooIt's probably the best business/leadership/PM experience possible in the world for someone just out of school.  I think it's rivals management consulting in terms of business experience - since you're directly responsible for something, but still involved at a high level.   I think one learns by doing and by being exposed to stuffThe greater scope and responsibility one has, the more one learns, I believe.
  
===Good Match===
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==Mountain View==
I think I was a perfect match for MIT. At MIT, the focus is one science and technology, which is what I am interested in.  However, that also includes how technology effects people; for example, the program in [[Science, Technology, and Society]]. MIT is not mired in tradition, and is always looking for ways to improve itself.  For example, [http://future.mit.edu future.mit.edu] is an idea board where members of the MIT community can submit ideas for the future of education at MIT.  MIT is also a place of limitless potentialThere are no internal limits - there are no limits to transfer into a major; classes are pretty much open to all students, especially if you can convince the professor you should be in; most classes don't have caps, if they are well-subscribed, the department tries to add grad students; there is only one organization, which is open to all - unlike Harvard where undergrads dare not step foot in the business school libraryOnce your in, you're in. There is also an openness here. A bit over 10 years ago, MIT looked around the online education space and decided to put everything online for free as "Open Course Ware"While I was here, MIT decided to go a step further and launch [[EdX]], a non-profit dedicated to online education.  I'm not sure to what extent this is at other top schools, but MIT students are also fairly involved in how the Institute is run.
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[[File:Mountain View Home.jpg|thumb|Mountain View Home]]
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[[File:Chevy Volt.jpg|thumb|Chevy Volt]]
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I'm settled into my new place in [[Mountain View]]. [http://www.flickr.com/photos/theplaz/sets/72157634601732288/ Photos] I'm sharing a house with 2 other guys, who were friends of friendsI've purchased a [[Chevy Volt]][http://www.flickr.com/photos/theplaz/sets/72157634595577805/ Photos] It goes 40 miles in a charge, but after that it can use gasIn almost 2 months, I haven't gone to the gas station once!
  
===Perfect Playground===
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I'm meeting a lot of new people here. Everyone seems to be a friend of a friend at least, and about 20-30% have heard of me before!  That's kinda scarey!
MIT is one of those very special places where students are free to explore and learn as much as possible.  It's full sensory stimulation.  Even for people who get bored easily, you won't get bored here! There are so many different things to master, combined with an almost infinite depth that if you're bored at MIT, you're not doing something right.
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===Peers===
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==Leaving MIT==
One of the best parts of MIT are the other studentsWith very few exceptions, people here are at the top of their game.    People go to top industries: consulting, banking, entrepreneurship, so you can learn about these "1%" jobs that one would have never heard about back homeYou can learn from your peers and model their behavior to fit into these jobs.
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I had my best semester ever, my last semester at MIT.  I had 5 As and one B-I was literally 10 points away from a 5.0!
  
===Awesome Deal===
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[[File:Pens MIT Spring 2013.jpg|thumb|Pens|200px]]
I also received a very good deal financially in order to attend. My parents and I paid about $10,000 per year to attend, about 1/5 the billed cost and perhaps 1/8 of MIT's estimated total spending per student.  It would have cost me more to have gone to a lower ranked schools, where I would have had far fewer opportunitiesI do have some debt, but I could pay it off today, with my cash on hand, if I wanted.
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[[File:Paper MIT Spring 2013.jpg|thumb|Paper|200px]]
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This semester I used 32 inches of paper, as well as 31 pensHere is a chart of usage over time:
===Economic Mobility===
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MIT is also one of those auto ladders to the upper class.  It won't necessarily get you in the top 1% (~$350,000/year household income) or at least not immediately, but it will at least get into the top 10% (once you control for household size) almost right from the start.  MIT and the other ivy league schools with generous financial aid policies are probably one of the 10 most important factors for social mobility in the world.  I'm making more than both of my parents made last year, combined, my first year out of school.
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==What I learned==
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[[File:Pens and Paper Usage.png]]
===Focus and Intensity===
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MIT is like bootcamp for your brain.  Everyday is not fun.  I've had days where I was so tired I couldn't wait to get to sleep, but I still had work to do.  There were days where I didn't think I could manage everything I had to do, or days when I thought I was going to fail a test.  However, in the end, just like real bootcamp, in that it is an intense experience that is worth it in the end.
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The unofficial motto of MIT is IHTFP.  This can either mean "I have truly found paradise" or "I hate this fucking place" depending on your mood that dayAnother benefit is that everyone is in the same boat. One of the ways you can help deal with the stress is to commiserate with other studentsSince we don't have honors on degrees, the competition is not strictly against each other, but against the work and the challengeThere is also competition with students at other schools for the best jobs.  I think MIT would be fairly easy if you just tried to get through doing only the minimum amount of work possible. There are a number of difficult GIRs, but they are hard to fail completely.  Instead the difficulty is that most people here feel a need to do high quality work. 
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I wrote up two white papers on MIT Policy[[A Framework for Community Engagement]] is a refinement of the community engagement process which administrators currently follow. [[Problem Solving Teams]] proposes having students work as "management consultants" on the Institute’s biggest problemsThis joins [[Unrelenting Advocacy]], about how stundets should act like lobbyists and consultantsThis rounds up my [MIT Policy White Papers] series.
  
One of the best parts is that everyone is all in when at MIT. When you here you are singularly focused on education. There aren't many distractionsPeople, even those that live nearby, don't go home on the weekends.  This is a significant difference from what I've heard from my friends happens at other schools, where people have other commitments and go home.    This helps contribute to productivity.  I've found I am more productive when I am busier - as it forces me to focusEven though I get started early and force myself to work on stuff, I get stuff done faster under pressure.  In addition, when I go home for breaks I find that I am also much less productive at home.  I can't watch commercial television anymore, there is just too much redundancy and simplification.
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[[File:MIT Graduation.jpg|thumb|MIT Graduation]]
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Graduation was a super rainy affair - it was pretty miserable. [http://www.flickr.com/photos/theplaz/sets/72157634578617238/ Photos] However, I'm happy to say that I've now graduatedIt was sad to leave all of the stuff I really liked about MIT behind.
  
When you look back, you remember the good parts, and forget the bad partsPlus, I've been told by MIT grads that after MIT, everything else after this is easy.
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I used the time I was off (3 weeks at MIT, 3 weeks at home, and 3 weeks in CA) to get organized and clean up my stuffI emptied some boxes I hadn’t touched in years.  I scanned more paper.  However, I have still not managed to post my MIT stuff or more from the archives.
  
===Analytical Ability===
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==Personal Style==
I think I am able to look at situations much more clearly now.  In part this is due to greater specific, content knowledge, but I think it's mostly because I think my analytic abilities have improved.  When I see something, I being to decompose the problem into multiple, independent sub-problems.  This process, which is the hallmark of management consultants, makes it easier to think about big problems.
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I also spent some time to reflect on my [Personal Style].  I spent several months iterating on this - and it ended up being quite lengthy! I wanted to record this, because I know with will update over time, and I wanted to make a record of it.  I think it's also helpful for people to know how I approach problem solving.
 
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--[[User:ThePlaz|ThePlaz]] ([[User talk:ThePlaz|talk]]) 02:55, 25 August 2013 (EDT)
Things in the world no longer seem random.  Instead things seem to fit into some sort of pattern or framework.  MIT also give you plenty of examples - over and over again in different situations.  For example, in high school, I didn't understand how the school board or township board of commissioners operated to approve a project.  I now understand this much better, not only so I can interact with, but so I can analyze and compare the process.
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===Management Ability===
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I see a huge difference in how I interacted at my [[Disney]] internship after junior year and how I interacted at my [[Deutsche Bahn]] internshipAt DB, I broke every rule in the MBA playbook, since I was not aware of them at the time.  On the other hand, at Disney, I was much more aware of the rules and I worked much more in concert with the organization. 
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Although it seemed like I had a greater impact at the Deutsche Bahn project (designing the UI of the [[Touch&Travel]] app), I think this is because I got very lucky with the Deutsche Bahn project - I was in the right place at the right time, and I augmented a skill-set that they lacked.  Disney was much more on top of it, but I also tried to not reach too far beyond my own role, which is probably the best long-term  strategy for a manager in a big firm.
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==What I did==
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===Academic===
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It also took me a while to adjust to MIT.  I came in fairly not well prepared.  However, I did better than I did the previous term 6 of the 7 terms.  I ended up with a 4.4 GPA, which is respectable, but not on the high end.
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[[File:MIT GPA.png]]
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I sampled a lot of fields at MIT.  I was a double major of [[Management]] and [[Computer Science]].  I also took about a class or two which were not strictly required for either of my majors many terms.  I took 7 classes a term three of my terms here.  This amounts to almost double the average of 48 units a term.
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I did fairly poorly my first few years.  I came into MIT not really being prepared. I even took the "easy"-version of [[Calculus]] in high school.  Other MIT students did math competitions in high school, which I wasn't even aware of, and if I was, I would have never considered joining, as I didn't have the drive to improve my skills back then, as I do now.
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In addition, as with many MIT students, I never really had to study in high school.  My first semester was a shock to me, as I wrote about in [[Learning to Learn]].  Since then, I used those techniques all of the time, and greatly improved my ability to learn stuff.  I wish I have known that in high school, so I would be better prepared for MIT-level work.  I think I would do far better if I was able to retake those classes.
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===Management Experience===
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On the management side, I think I cracked the code about how to get stuff done at MIT.  In my 4 years, I've made connections with people at every level from the line staff to President Reif.  I remember reading every page on the MIT First Year website super carefully in the summer before MIT.  Once I got here, I learned more about the inside working of those policies and the politics behind them; I even helped shape some of the policies.
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I think every MIT focuses on something.  I just happened to focus a lot on Institute management and politics.  I learned a great deal from this arrangement.  From my position on various [[Institute committees]] on both the student life and academic sides, I got to know the Institute's leadership. I got to work with a real-life $2 billion dollar organization and understand how its leaders operate and how it makes decisions at every level.  I developed my ability to inflence and persuade, writing up what I learned in a [[:File:Unrelenting_Advocacy.pdf|white paper for future student advocates]].
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With [[Baker Exec]], I got the opportunity to run an organization with about 20 volunteers and a $50,000 budget.  It had its ups and downs, but I got to [[Baker President|learn a lot]] from how much autonomy to give subordinates to how to motivation volunteers to setting high-level strategy.
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It also got me thinking about policy design with the [[Baker Rooming Policy]], [[Baker Security Plan]], and the [[Framework for Student Engagement]].  Policy design is a lot like programming, you have to anticipate every edge case.
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I started to do this at [[Disney]], and now I need to do it at [[Oracle]].  I must learn the new players in the game and adapt to that situation.
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===MOOCs: MITx and edX===
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I was also very fortunate to being in the right place at the right time with the roll out of [[EdX]].  Since early high school, I've wanted to improve the world's access to educational materials.  I started scanning and putting all of my notes available online in 8th grade.  When I started this, I remember being influenced by MIT's OCW program.  Because of this, I ran for the undergraduate spot on [[MITCET]], the MIT Committee on Educational Technology.  While I was on the committee, it came to light that then-Provost Rafael Reif wanted to counter Stanford's AI class with an Institute-wide initiative of our own.  I was involved in the initial discussions with MITCET and then-Provost Reif on how the new group should be organized with respect to MIT. In that memo, I proposed a platform which I called "EDUx" as a software platform which would help both MOOCs and traditional classes.  This was about 6 months before MIT and Harvard announced "edX".
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==Looking Back==
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I would certainly come to MIT again.  The quality of the exits and the experience that one can have here is almost unparalleled (save perhaps Harvard and Stanford, but they have slightly different twists but are otherwise on-par).
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I sought a non-traditional exit from MIT by going to the management track of a large company.  I think many MIT students try to either start their own firm or go into engineering at large tech firms like Facebook or Dropbox.  That never particularly appealed to me, so I didn't prepare enough for those roles.
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I'm sad to leave.  There are a number of things that I know I will never be able to replicate.  Living in Baker was amazing.  Not only is it a architectural landmark with million-dollar views and handmade, hardwood furniture but it had my friends living right next door.  I had plenty of amazing conversations at 2am when friends just stopped by my open door.  In work, especially at the entry level, you focus on one or two things at once.  Only once you rise through the ranks, must you balance multiple challenges again, but you still generally have a small set of goals. 
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===What would I do differently?===
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As I said before, I wish I would have prepared more in [[HHS|high school]].  I should have been less reliant on sites like HotMath and studied more intensely to master the material.  I just didn't have the interest, focus, or role models at the time.
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At the end of [[MIT Freshman|freshman year]], I said that I wanted to focus on classes while at MIT, because I felt like that was an experience that I wanted to maximize while I had access to those resources (ie. was paying tuition).  I've since learned that there are many other resources which are only available to one while they are at MIT, such as close contact to the many very smart people here.  Perhaps I could have focused more on those; but on the other hand, I don't know which classes I would have skipped instead - besides the ones I had to take, but I didn't enjoy.
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If I was targeting an engineering role, I should have focused more on quality and engineering classes.  I could have just focused on engineering, worked as an engineer for two years, and then have gone to business school.  However, as I confirmed when I was at [[CardSpring]] last [[IAP]], I don't think I would have found concentrating as an engineer to be very fun.
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I wish I would have spent more time with my peers.  I think I made a good number of close friends, but I always think I should have done more.  I never really spent much time on the [[Sloan]] side because I never really paid attention to Sloan events or classmates.
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I wish I had taken on more leadership roles.  At first, I thought that I liked to be in the background, but being [[Baker President|President of Baker]] helped me see that I like being in the spotlight as well.  I was also cautious with my time.  I could have been more directly involved in the [[UA]].  Looking back, I actually held less formal positions than my title suggested.
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I wish I did more to learn more advanced [[Computer Science]] topics.  I can learn more in the future, but I might not be around the smart peers.  Compilers are still magic to me.  I still don't know the internals of JavaScript and advanced topics like closures.  Design patterns are still a bit cloudy.  I've come a long way since high school, but I still have a lot to learn.
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I think part of the problem was is that I didn't know where I wanted to end up.  I still really don’t.  I wrote a [[What Drives Me and What I Want to Do|vision document]] my last week of summer before [[MIT Senior|senior year]].  It was two pages or so, but it wasn't helpful.  There were many possible paths to implementation which I was unsure between.  Still I am fairly happy with where I ended up.
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I threw away some opportunities as well.  For example, I was well positioned to work in the MOOC space.  However, I was just not interested in it.  Instead, I took a position for which I didn't have an inside connection on.  Do I just get too bored too quick?
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I think MIT misses some things from not being a larger school like Harvard or Stanford.  For example, there is no law school nearby, so people don't really think about those things.  MIT is also more centralized, than entrepreneurial.  I think I would have been slightly more entrepreneurial than management oriented at Stanford.
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For that matter, I did very little to reach out to the outside community.  For example, despite knowing about it in high school and being on their mailing list I only went to one [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ Harvard Berkman Center] event.  I just never got to opening up their emails and adding them to my calendar.  I probably also would have been too busy to make the ~20-30 min trip up to Harvard.
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--[[User:ThePlaz|ThePlaz]] ([[User talk:ThePlaz|talk]]) 21:15, 28 May 2013 (EDT)
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Revision as of 07:02, 25 August 2013

Resume

Welcome to ThePlaz.com

the site for all things Michael Plasmeier (ThePlaz)

This site is a wiki. That means that anybody (including YOU) can edit and change the information found here. (Editing help)

My site contains mostly my homework and projects as well as various stuff from my life. (Site Mission Statement)

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MIT Senior edit

Fall
  • Schedule
  • 7.012 Intro to Biology
  • 6.046 Advanced Algorithms
  • 6.858 Computer and Network Security
  • 14.72 Capitalism and its Critics
  • STS.085 Ethics and the Law on the Electronic Frontier
  • 2.009 Product Design Process (Listener)
  • 15.062 Data Mining (Listener)
Spring

MIT Junior edit

Fall
  • 6.004 Computation Structures
  • 6.005 Elements of Software Construction
  • 6.034 Artificial Intelligence
  • STS.011 Ethics and Politics in Science and Technology
  • 15.387 Technology Sales and Sales Management
  • 15.665 Power and Negotiation
  • 18.03 Differential Equations
  • Working out a System - How I take 7 classes at MIT and thrive
Spring
  • Spring Schedule
  • 6.033 Computer System Engineering
  • 6.813 User Interface Design and Implementation
  • 6.006 Introduction to Algorithms
  • 15.571 Business Strategy and the Role of IT
  • 15.565 Digital Evolution: Managing Web 3.0
  • 15.301 Managerial Psychology Laboratory
  • 18.06 Linear Algebra

MIT Sophomore edit

Fall
  • 6.01 Intro to EECS (Potpourri Introduction)
  • 6.041 Probabilistic Systems Analysis
  • 14.01 Principles of Microeconomics
  • 15.501 Corporate Financial Accounting
  • 15.567 Econ of Information
  • 16.71 Airline Industry
Spring
  • 4.211 The Present and Future City
  • 6.02 Intro to EECS 2 (Communications)
  • 6.042 Math for Computer Science (Potpourri Introduction)
  • 14.02 Microeconomics
  • 15.279 Intro to Managerial Communications
  • 15.401 Intro to Finance
  • 15.761 Operations Research
  • ESD.051 Engineering, Innovation, and Design (Listener)
Politics

MIT Freshman edit

Fall

  • 8.01 Physics: Mechanics - Prof. Greytak
  • 3.091 Intro to Solid State Chemistry - Prof. Sadoway
  • 18.01 Single Variable Calculus - Prof. Brubaker
  • MAS.110 Fundamentals of Computational Media Design - Prof. Bove
  • 6.A53 Entrepreneurship and China Advising Seminar - Dr. Eng
  • SocialSaver UROP at the MIT Media Lab
  • Learning to Learn at MIT - My "near fail" experience that caused me to pull it together

Spring

Other Stuff

Nuvola apps kpovmodeler.png AP Physics (Science)

30px-OneNote.png Open OneNote Notebook

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Nuvola USA flag.png AP US Government (History)

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Nuvola apps kbrunch.png Calculus (Math)

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Nuvola apps edu languages.png AP Psychology (Psychology)

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Nuvola apps bug.png Biology (Science)

Nuvola apps kmplot.png PreCalc (Math)

Nuvola USA flag.png American Studies (History)

  • Projects
  • Notes from Out of Many Textbook
  • FTCE test : FTCE test failure reveals how to rip through the FTCE test.
developed Headline Notetaking Format

Nuvola USA flag pen.png English 11 (English)

Nuvola apps edu mathematics.png IAG 4H (Math)

Nuvola apps edu science.png Chemistry (Science)

Nuvola apps package network.png World Cultures (History)

Nuvola apps korganizer.png AP Macro Economics (Economics)

Nuvola apps file-manager.png English 10 (English)

Nuvola apps kig.png IAG 3H (Math)

Nuvola apps bookcase.png English 9 (English)

Nuvola apps kverbos.png Western Civ (History)

Projects

Outlines

Maps and Creative
French Revolution Napoleon-peque.jpg

Essays and Reports

Nuvola apps edu phi.png IPS (Science)

Nuvola apps kcalc.png IAG 2H and IAG 1H (Math)

Nuvola apps kate.png Latin

Latin 3

Projects
Notes
Journals

Double Entry Journals have 2 components: What I Learned (a summery), and Personal Response (a reflection)

Latin 2

Projects
  1. Roman Travel Project
  2. Sejanus
  3. Echo and Narcissus Myth
  4. The Journey of the Hero
Journals

Latin 1

Money-256x256.png Entrepreneurship (Business)

30px-OneNote.png Open OneNote Notebook

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Nuvola apps personal.png Business Law (Business)

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Nuvola apps amarok.png Pop Music (Music)

Nuvola filesystems folder blue open.png Other edit

Nuvola filesystems folder blue open.png 8th Grade

Nuvola filesystems folder blue open.png 7th Grade

Nuvola apps kuser.png About Me edit

Michael Plasmeier Spring 2009 Narrow.JPG
Michael Plasmeier
"ThePlaz"
Yahoo APM: Membership and Geo Platforms

My name is Michael Plasmeier, but almost everyone calls me Plaz. I am a Associate Product Manager at Yahoo - working on the Membership and Geo-related platforms teams. I graduated from MIT in 2013 in Computer Science and Management. I am halfway between the tech and the business world, doing both web development and product development. My interest in doing both started while I was working on GridView, an app I built after 10th Grade that reached 1.3 million users on Facebook.

Internships

Last IAP, I was a Software Development Extern doing testing in Ruby on the back end at CardSpring. Last summer, I was Product Manager at Disney Parks and Resorts Online where I worked on a project for Disney Cruise Line. Last January, I worked in management/strategy consulting at Altman Vilandrie & Company. The previous summer, I was a web developer at NextJump, an online affiliate advertising firm in New York. Prior to that, I was an extern in the Office of the Chief Scientist at State Street. My freshman summer I worked at Deutsche Bahn, the German national railroad, where I designed the smartphone version Touch&Travel, an app that lets you pay for the train with your phone.

MIT

At MIT I was heavily involved in classes, usually taking 7 classes a term, while being involved in student government. (I wrote about how I do it in Working out a System.) senior was dedicated to wrapping up requirements. Junior year at MIT I focused on EECS classes, as well as being elected president of Baker House. My second year at MIT focused on management classes. I was also involved in the vendor selection and implementation of the new dining plan. Freshman year, I took core classes and served on the Athena and Printing Committee. (I wrote about just hanging on freshmen year in Learning to Learn.)

Websites

I built a lot of web projects in high school. My most popular project, was GridView [1], an app for Facebook which lets you add the profile pics of all of you're friends to your Facebook profile. GridView had over 1.3 million users and made me some money.

I hosted and produced the video podcast Tecker 911 [2] along with some of my friends. Tecker 911 was a series of 100 5-15 minute shows each which covers a technology topic in a way which is relevant for ordinary people, with a focus towards students and our community. Tecker 911 was also shown on our local public access channel Channel 11.

I started SeniorQuoter, [3] an open-source web application for senior quotes collections for high school yearbooks. In 11th Grade, I lead a Dynamic Website Building Instruction and Practical Experience Group Study at my high school. I helped 4 other students learn PHP and MySQL and then I project managed version 2 of SeniorQuoter, the administration interface.

Tecker and Conflicter were question and answer services I built in 10th Grade. They never really caught on, but they were the perfect way to learn PHP. Dictionary Robot is something I tarted last year, but abandoned later. In 10th Grade, I was a member of Team 484 and in 11th Grade I was their webmaster.

In 8th and 9th Grades I wrote bunch of programs for the TI-83+.

Tech

My first two years at MIT, I was a regular on The Weekly Spin, a weekly take on tech stories and tech policy.

On my Tech page I have had a few pages about Devices I own and other small things that I have built. For example, I also made some improvements for MediaWiki, the software that runs ThePlaz.com and Wikipedia. I made a new skin for MediaWiki and a few MediaWiki extensions


Other Accounts

I also tag a lot of stories on Delicious. I also have over 70,000 photos on Flickr. I Tweet kinda regularly. I also post things to YouTube. And of course I have a Facebook. It all comes together on my FriendFeed.

Website Content

On my site you will find:

  • Updates on what I am involved in
  • Links to my other projects
  • My comments on the world
  • Photos and videos I have taken
  • School work and notes I have made
School Work

I hope that this knowledge will help people less-fortunate than me persevere and succeed. All of my work is under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.5 license, meaning that you may use it and re-post it anywhere as long as you post my name/nickname, provide a link back to my site, and don't make money off my work. Many people visit my site from overseas where the school system is not as good. See Site Mission Statement for more

    • For 9th Grade I have posted projects I did on the computer
    • For 10th Grade I have posted not only my work I made on a computer but laboriously scanned all of my handwritten notes and worksheets
    • For 11th Grade I am only posting my own notes (no worksheets) from very structured classes; I am scaling back
    • For 12th Grade I used a tablet PC, so I have posted my OneNote notebooks from the class
    • For MIT Freshman year, I used a tablet PC for the first semester; realized this was a bad idea; so I used paper which I scanned and released as large PDFs the second semester. Note MIT actually does the same thing I do with MIT OCW.
    • For MIT Sophomore I will continue to post large, comprehensive PDFs.
    • See also my Notes Key
Tech

Theweeklyspin.png The Weekly Spin

The Weekly Spin is a weekly rant about technology and tech policy with Michael Gdovin. We often cover the cell phone industry, the FCC, DRM, and Michael likes to throw in some Apple rumors.

Download the latest episodes: TheWeeklySpin.com Audio Podcast

Nuvola apps laptop pcmcia.png Student Tools edit

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ThePlaz in often mentioned or interviewed in the news

MIT
MIT Dining
MITx/EdX
Baker Piano Drop
Tecker 911
GridView
ThePlaz.com Praise
  • Sam's Praise about my site
  • Baron Harkonnen's Thanks
  • Thanks for uploading Flickr photos
  • Uses Many ThePlaz.com Wiki features
  • A Drexel professor told me on the first day of class that I take very good notes and I would graduate suma cum laude from Harvard due to the quality of my notes at Gov School
  • Hi I saw your page about that download for the ferris wheel unit for IMP4, I didn't download it but even the info you had on the page helped me out. I have no idea what I'm doing and just started this year- i really get stuck on my homework EVERY night. Right now im working on HW 2 "As the ferris wheel turns" and i have no idea what I'm doing. But i just wanted to say thanks cause I'm gonna download that once I'm farther into the unit!--A Facebook user (J. S.)
  • Just wanted to let you know: I stole your headline method of note taking from your website and it is completely saving my life in American Studies. -Rebecca C.
  • Hey, you do have one of the best designed websites I have seen lately. Good job. A little flashy, but still functional. --Email comment 8/18/2010
Videos

Nuvola apps multimedia.png Video edit

Tecker 911 Logo.png Tecker 911

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Trips/Vacations
Universities
MIT
Haverford High School
Places/Events/Daytrips

(need to update)

Tech/Unboxing/Products
Pictures on the Wikimedia Commons

TI-83--rotated.png TI-83+ Stuff edit

Nuvola apps kcmprocessor.png Tech Stuff edit

I am a lot into technology. Here are links to some of my web sites as well as modifications and how-to articles about other software.

My Websites
Devices
MediaWiki Tweaks
Essays/Thoughts
Other

Nuvola apps gaim.png Miscellaneous edit

Nuvola apps remote.png Site Statistics edit

For up-to-date info see Special:Statistics

There are 6,499 total pages in the database, including 1,578 pages in the main namespace and 5,000 files uploaded. These counts do not include OneNote notebooks on minisites or SkyDrive, and count multi-page files (PDF and Word) as one page.

There have been a total of 5,163,449 page views, and 16,470 page edits since ThePlaz.com was setup. That comes to 2.53 average edits per page, and 313.51 views per edit.