Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Give me a job!

At long last, my job application is done.

The file contains CV, research and teaching statements. If you're in a research lab, ignore any mention of how I like to teach ;)

Monday, December 17, 2007

Travel pictures (2): Kakamega Rainforest

Look at me, I can fly!

Pensative blue monkey:

Another blue monkey:

The eternal fight for food (the monkey climbed on Mira, bit her hand, and got the banana -- but I didn't quite have time to set up for the photo):

Black and white Colobus monkey:
The red-tail monkey:

Romanians are close descendents of monkeys:


I have a big telelens:

Many many ants:

Travel pictures (1): Kenya life

The dead was a rich man, he could afford a coffin. (I am told poor people pick their dead from the hospital wrapped in a mattress).

I live in the Romanian hut on the volunteer camp:

The medical clinic, and "the mobile clinic" (the van):

Inside the clinic: Dr. Mira and assisting clinical officer Belinda.

Medicine, Kenyan style (writing on the first jug: "Paracetamol")

On most days, the mobile clinic travels to remote villages to see people there. They set up in local churces, such as the following Catholic church:

If they are lucky, the curch has a separate room which becomes "the examination room":

Monday, December 10, 2007

Non-post

I made it to the Internet in town after a 10km walk. As Piotr had so wisely predicted, I am now a bit tired and not really feeling like writing a blog post. :)

Instead, let me point you to a recent comment by Kamal Jain (addressing my post about his talk), which is long enough to serve as a blogpost in itself :) Reply on that thread if you want to say something.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Away

An excellent tradition in the US academic world is the sabbatical: roughly every 6 years, you take a year off (with some pay). People typically travel around the world, spend some time at other universities, interact with industry etc. I think this is a great idea for maintaining your creativity and breadth, and it's a shame that companies which require serious thinking don't have a similar benefit.

In my own case, I have started doing research about 5 and a half years ago. And, the eager person that I am, I decided to take a sabbatical a bit early. Of course, since I'm still on MIT's payroll as a student, this is a bit unofficial :) But the basic idea is the same.

This is mostly plan-as-you-go, but here's the rough idea:

  • first week of December: London.
  • 6 weeks in a rural location in East Kenya, with a small detour to do white-water rafting in Uganda (at the source of the Nile)
  • 1+ weeks climbing Kilimanjaro and taking a safari (Tanzania).
  • 3 weeks in Romania (yes, I will gladly give talks!)
  • 1 week in Dagstuhl (session on data structures)
After that I'm coming back to the US to hopefully interview for some faculty / research-lab positions. In the summer, I plan to go to some other exotic locations and write my thesis.

My main goals on this trip are to (1) relax and enjoy the life experience, (2) think about some really long-shot problems, (3) think about some diverse fields of research that I have not considered before. I feel a great danger for researchers is to get stuck improving a field that they have revolutionized earlier. One needs to spend time targeted at starting new revolutions, not on your old business-as-usual research.

So, going with the plan, I have spent the past week in London, minding the gap and trying not to get killed by all those maniacs driving on the wrong side of the road. (This skill proves useful, since they are also at it in Kenya.) London is a nice city, but I feel it has lost some of the European charm that I find in many cities on the continent. Or maybe I'm desensitized by prolonged exposure to American culture, a close descendant of the British culture.

The most durable thing about visiting London is the hole in your wallet. Roughly speaking, all prices look like the right number, except that they have this funny pound sign instead of "$". With an exchange rate of $2.2 for a pound, it feels like your pay-check comes from a third-world country. Unfortunately, dark days seem to lie ahead for all of us relying on this collapsing economy...

Today, I am in Nairobi catching up with things, and tomorrow I will be enjoying a 9-hour bus ride to the other end of Kenya. I will try to post once in a while depending on Internet connectivity (they say there's a post office with an Internet connection, at a convenient 10-mile run). But of course, if I happen to solve P vs NP I will make an effort to post about it.