To be fair, MIT tries to be as self-important as the other two, but their external relations office writes all their press releases in binary.
Edit: I’m going to replace “self-important” with “worldly” as soon as I get my tablet working again. I think it’s probably more accurate.
I bet they graduated before Facebook was invented. That would explain a lot.
Here’s why reading educational research feels like punching yourself in the face.
People who ask you “what’s the point?” just don’t get it.
Dwarf Fortress is a free text-based sandbox game with a cult following where you direct a bunch of dwarves to build a fortress. It’s like The Sims with no graphics and more beer and weapons.
“For modnay: grosdfp researcz pp. 83 to 32.” - your professor
Don’t tell me this isn’t a problem. If my college had had fountains, there would have been pictures of my friends and me on the internet that would have seriously hurt our career prospects.
Both rated “Best Small Towns” by Crazy Engineer Magazine, just 100 years apart.
Stanford: where pedestrians are an embattled minority.
“Needfinding” is seriously my least favorite design buzzword.
I remember this slide from an inservice day back at the ranch. (Only the really good points penetrate my free-cookie-induced sugar daze.)
Me, I love schools. This is both a strength and a liability.
My first-ever Java problem set, which I turned in 3 days early last week, made me feel like a champion.
If you’re on the fence about whether to learn basic computer science, read “Why Johnny Can’t Program” by D. Rushkoff.
Design teachers understand how visual memory works. Hooray!
This is why they don’t give us water balloons in grad school.