March 14th, 2007 by ken
It is Pi’s birthday today. I thought about making him a pie of some kind. Instead, I will just post his page. (Link opens in a new window!)
For some additional π day fun, download piX for Mac OSX. I calculated it out to one million decimals, which took 447.190 seconds. When I tried to post it, my database choked. So below is π to much less than one million decimals. Enjoy!
π=3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510
582097494459230781640628620899862803482534211706798
21480865132823066470938446095505822317253594081284811
17450284102701938521105559644622948954930381964428810
97566593344612847564823378678316527120190914564856692
3460348610454326648213393607260249141273724587006606
31558817488152092096282925409171536436789259036001133
053054882046652138414695194151160943305727036575959195
309218611738193261179310511854807446237996274956735188
57527248912279381830119491298336733624406566430860213
949463952247371907021798609437027705392171762931767523
846748184676694051320005681271452635608277857713427577
896091736371787214684409012249534301465495853710507922
796892589235420199561121290219608640344181598136297747
713099605187072113499999983729780499510597317328160963
18595024459455346908302642522308253344685035261931188
171010003137838752886587533208381420617177669147303598
253490428755468731159562863882353787593751957781857780
532171226806613001927876611195909216420198938095257201
0654858632788659361533818279682303019520353018529689
9577362259941389124972177528347913151557485724245415069
59508295331168617278558890750983817546374649393192550
6040092770167113900984882401285836160356370766010471
01819429555961989467678374494482553797747268471040475
3464620804668425906949129331367702898915210475216205
6966024058038150193511253382430035587640247496473263
91419927260426992279678235478163600934172164121992458
6315030286182974555706749838505494588586926995690927
Posted in Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

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March 12th, 2007 by ken
The interview is a standard part of securing employment in the modern job market. Whether you are seeking a job in higher ed or as a day laborer (and I use these examples only because I have experience in both), you will need to interview, and interview strongly, to get the job. You will spend more time with new co-workers than your friends and family. Now, whether you really want to work with these folks is a different story, improtant or you to find out on the interview. Below are key points I keep in mind when interviewing. The goal is to get the job offer. All decisions follow from that.
Why am I writing this? I have conducted nearly 100 interviews in the last four years with college students seeking on-campus student employment and engaged in a dozen interviews myself in the last ten years. I am not a job counselor and have no qualifications other than the aforementioned experiences.
Interviewing is basically a timed oral essay. The nice thing is that you can prepare for it. You are intimately familiar with the subject matter: you, and are better qualified to speak to your strengths, skills, knowledge, and goals than any other living thing. Identify your goals. Know what you want. Understand that you are marketing yourself. Keep your marketing message in mind.
We all learn how to write essays in high school. Here are the three steps to creating your interview essay:
- Have a thesis. Your thesis is, “I am the best person for this job”.
- Support your thesis. A week before you start interviewing, write down the three strongest reasons that you are the best person for the job. Use positive examples of contributions you would make.
- Present a strong conclusion. Just like that high school essay, a concluding sentence or two that summarizes your thesis and supporting points is crucial. These should be the last words out of your mouth, and it should end with something along the lines of, “Thank you for giving me the opportunity to interview with you.”
Other key things to remember are:
- Take notes. My mind races during an interview. I will often say things that I want to emphasize again later on, or think of something unrelated to the interview that I absolutely need to follow up on. By jotting it down, you appear to be ready for the professional world, and you can address the topic later.
- Neatness counts. Clip your fingernails, tie your shoelaces, etc.
- Dress for the job you ultimately want. Interviewing to clean stables but want to be a jockey? Dress like a jockey. Interviewing to work in the mail room but want to be the CEO? Dress like a CEO.
- Interviewing is like sex, voting, and retiring. Do it early and do it often. Very few people care about your motives. You don’t have to accept every job offer, but do accept every interview offer. (I do not suggest that you accept every offer of sex! Use discretion. Protect yourself. Do accept every offer to vote or retire.)
- Practice, practice, practice. Try out new approaches in interviews you don’t need. Have a great joke about nervous interviewees? Don’t try it when up for your dream job! Do unleash it when interviewing for the burger-flipping position.
- Be nervous. Its okay, really, to be nervous. If you can channel that nervousness into positive energy, do it. Remember to breathe evenly, and visualize something that makes you happy, whether its a coral reef or an image of the first pay-check.
Other good hits on this topic: “A glimpse and a hook“. This fellow has some good advice. I disagree with his thoughts on cover letters. Even if no one ever reads your cover letter, writing a clear, concise cover letter is one of the best ways to prepare for an interview. Write it, rewrite it. I suggest that you should spend twice as much time on your cover letter as you CV. Questions to ask yourself during the process are:
- How well does my CV reflect what I am saying in my cover letter?
- Can I excise verbage from the cover letter. (Translation: Write a draft, take a red pen and cross out any and all extra words!)
- Keep it brief. In “A glimpse and a hook”, the writer emphasizes that his opinions are formed within 30 seconds. I don’t want to read the gory details. I want those later.
- Provide just enough detail to allow me to formulate good questions. A cover letter is a balancing act. When I interview, I need something to get the conversation going. If your cover letter and CV answer every question, I might not even bring you in for an interview!
- Conform to standards. Read and internalize Strunk & White. (This is advice I should follow.)
In a future post, I will discuss being the interviewer, and the techniques that I have found effective for identifying candidates I would be happy to work with and who would contribute substantially to core mission.
Posted in Notes from a commute | No Comments »

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