On 29/12/14 10:51, Atmn Patel wrote:
Hello all,
My name is Atmn Patel. I am a high school student in a small town near
Windsor, ON, Canada. I am technically in grade 10, but I'm looking at
a very early graduation. I was going to apply to the University of
Toronto this year, but didn't because my parents wouldn't let me go.
My dream school is MIT, double major in CS and Physics to pursue a
doctorate in Quantum Computing. I started with Linux in grade 6, with
Ubuntu (when they still used GNOME) but after they switched to Unity,
I changed to Arch Linux. I stuck with Arch until about 10 months ago
when I decided that I actually want to start contributing, I changed
to Fedora. I spent the last 10 months getting used to it,
understanding it, and toying with it, and now I think its time I start
contributing.
As for my computer skills, I know C and Python to the level of an
introductory undergraduate course. I am currently learning Java in my
spare time. I am also working towards getting the Linux Foundation
Certified System Administrator. As for project experience, I have
none. I believe that I am an excellent match for the project because I
am willing to learn and dedicate time to the project (I have no
experience whatsoever).
Time Zone: EST
Interests: N/A
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sub 2048R/ACCE24D7 2014-12-28 [expires: 2015-12-28]
I strongly suggest that you allow yourself to mature before going to
university, too many very bright children either burn out or have
difficulty adjusting socially, then bomb out! My youngest son really
wanted to get to university a year early when he was in year 10, but he
is glad he did not now - so we did look at a lot of the issues.
Very important to develop social & personal interactions skills. Not
just in relating to people socially, but being able to work effectively
in teams with various types of people, not just technical people.
Ensure that you can have a LIFE outside of physics & computers! You're
probably too young to even think about getting married in the future,
but you still need to learn how to cook & do housework, and look after
yourself - important for flatting, let alone for being married...
Broaden your experience and learning rather than rush into university.
Better to skip year 1 at university than a year of school. I taught
myself Special Relativity when I was at high school, but didn't really
know how to cook when I left home, and I am now in my second marriage.
However, I would like to encourage you to get more into Linux, and also
into advanced physics (no need to wait until university, have you seen
http://www.infocobuild.com/education/audio-video-courses/physics/quantum-entanglements-p1.html
?). Physics is fascinating, I read up on M-Theory, but most of the Math
is way, way beyond me - besides software development is meant to be were
I earn money!
If you really want to be a top flight physicist, you need to have a good
grasp of calculus, tensor algebra, and other aspects of Mathematics.
You may want to look at http://sagemath.org as this is free software
that runs on Linux that has similar features to Matlab & Mathematica.
I started with FORTRAN & COBOL, and I've taught C to experienced
programmers, and my main language now is Java. I consider myself lucky
that we have Linux, all my computers run Fedora. I think C & Java are
good languages to know, but you may want to look into C++ and even
FORTRAN (currently FORTRAN is the main language used in scientific super
computing).
Cheers,
Gavin
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