February 8, 2006Olympic DreamsRight on. A professor of mine from Drexel University is going to the Olympics!
For some reason, it all looked like fun to Nagvajara, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Drexel University. "He's my hero," Nagvajara said of the Kenyan. "So I had a goal. It became my endeavor that I should start training and maybe go to the next Olympics." Nagvajara put it all together. Boit was from a warm-weather climate, yet he performed in a Winter Olympics. The professor is from Thailand, where the temperature is typically in the 80s year-round and where a pair of skis is, well, probably the least considered mode of transportation. If Boit could do it, why couldn't he? Sure enough, he did. After receiving sponsorship from the Thai government and competing in Olympic qualifying events, Nagvajara represented Thailand in the 2002 Salt Lake City Games. "It was like a dream," he said. Dr Nagvajara had the best class at Drexel ever. Microcontrollers. It was a class on programming Legos. No kidding. This was in 98-ish, so the first generation of Lego Mindstorms hadn't yet come out. They were controlled by a 68000 series CPU with a couple of inputs and outputs and they controlled motors, sensors, etc. Programming in C and Assembler. The final project was to create a robot that navigated a rock strewn course, memorized it, then ran it as fast as possible. My partner and I won. We were the only team that completed it. On completion, the robot did a little jig. My final grade for that class was OVER 100. One more horn toot, while I'm at it. My class attendance was pretty lousy, and skipped it more than I should have. I was planning on skipping it one day but figured, what the hell, I'll go anyway. I showed up 10 minutes late to the mid-term. I took the test and was the first to leave... ... and I scored the highest. Anyway, congratulations for getting to the Olympics, Dr Nagvajara. Getting there is a victory!
"I hope someday Thailand will have more than one athlete for the Winter Olympics," he said. "That they'll have a team." Nagvajara is not out to win a medal. He knows that's impossible, but he'll be better prepared than he was four years ago, when he was lapped in the 30K and therefore automatically disqualified. "I should have lasted longer, but I didn't do my thing," he said. "And the rule is if the leader catches you, you're out. He caught me." |
Great post -- go Dr Nagvajara! Dust those Knordic Know-it-alls!
(We have a higher percentage of engineering types around here than Republicans. Every technical-type I know has a fond memory of a "Hard America" class in which he/she was allowed to excel. And most remember a contest or competition. Just an observation.)
Posted by: jk at February 8, 2006 10:49 AM"Hard America?" Sounds like an adult film.
Seriously. That was the best part of my college. It immersed you in Hard America immediately. You had to do 18-months of co-op to graduate. Nothing exposes you to reality than being in it.
Posted by: AlexC at February 8, 2006 1:15 PMOf course I dug reality so much, I dropped out to work full-time.
I suspect I might be the tipping point in that percentage? (being an engineer but not a Republican)
Spot on observation JK, for me, an ME, it was building a water tower. My team won the strength to weight ratio as I figured out how to make a joint that angled out in two directions with just pieces of angle iron - water tank was 2'x2' and the base was 3'x3' but we had only angle iron and flat iron to bolt together.
Alex also points out the other consequence - the lure to ditch school. I interned at McDonnell Douglas my 4 summers of college which had the intended consequence of teaching me about the real world and the unintended one of showing me how little relation much of my coursework had to that world. Theory gives you the basis of understanding, but without the ability to apply it doesn't get you very far.
Now if I could just find ancestry to some small country without an Olympic team...
Posted by: Silence Dogood at February 8, 2006 6:29 PMI know a frequent commenter whom I suspect would call himself a Republican, but is a English Lit'richure dude, so maybe it's even. Two droputs though -- we've got something going...
Posted by: jk at February 8, 2006 6:47 PM | What do you think? [4]