Author Archives: kevin

About kevin

I write the posts

links for 2011-01-24

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Alumni Day talk to Athenian HS students, January 9

Coming out of high school I had a great GPA, great SAT's, and great recommendations, but I was still a pretty weak candidate for college admission. How? I was puzzled too, when I was a senior and I got turned down from my top seven choices. The standard model for college admissions is this - you send your transcript, you take the SAT and hope for a good score, sign up for tons of activities, and write about the week long overseas community service trip that changed your life, and then you get in where you get in. The standard model is very deterministic; your SAT's and GPA more or less determine where you'll be able to get in. Here's the problem: Stanford gets 5000 applicants that look exactly like you every year, and they only have so many spots in their incoming class. Fortunately there's a way to beat the standard model, and pull way above your weight in terms of your GPA and SAT's, and that's through your activities. Specifically, you need to have impressive activities. Here's what I mean by impressive: if I could go out tomorrow and sign up for every activity you're doing, then your activities are not impressive, and won't impress a college admissions officer either. But, if you're doing crazy things, requiring a high amount of skill that I can't easily imagine myself doing, you have an impressive activity. ONE impressive activity will be your gravy train all the way through college. How do you get an impressive activity? First, if there's an activity you love doing, that you think about in the shower or that keeps you up at night, drop all your other activities and try to build an impressive level of skill in that one activity. If there isn't anything that gets you super excited, it's okay. Pick one of your activities at random, drop the other ones, and try to build an impressive skill level. One impressive activity is better than twelve crappy ones. If that doesn't sound particularly exciting for you, look for activities from your childhood you especially enjoyed, or for things people tell you you are exceptionally good at. For me, I've always been good at math, but I didn't try to excel or build my math skills, for fear of being pigeonholed. Your goal in picking extracurricular activities should be to try and become the best in California at something. Start a business, write for the Contra Costa Times, or learn how to program and contribute to Google Chrome. Are those activities unusual for someone your age? Of course. But you know what, so is being in the top 5% of applicants to Yale. So if you haven't figured out by now, I was a weak applicant because I didn't have impressive activities; I spent a lot of time playing sports (two different sports, go figure), and I wasn't good enough to earn a scholarship. In the past year I've done more cool stuff, and built up marketable skills, more than in the eight years before that put together. I just wish I'd started when I was your age.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

links for 2011-01-23

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

links for 2011-01-21

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Goals for 2011

1. Don’t talk anyone out of their assumptions about my talent level, fitness, etc.

2. Immediately reply to all emails that require less than 2 minutes to write (once my email script downloads them).

3. Make $1,000 selling things online

4. Maximize serendipitous opportunities – send low-cost emails, meet people, get people in my corner.

5. Spend more money

6. Go to Joshua Tree

Some tools I used for the first time/got good at using over winter break

Running apps with Flask
Jinja templating
Vim
Cron jobs
Parsing XML with etree
Photoshop
Mercurial
One-click deploys with Fabric and Mercurial
UNIX/Bash scripting
Google Apps
Writing Chrome extensions
Mental math (don’t ask)

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.

Martin Luther King Day

On Martin Luther King Day I like to think about how easy it is for people to discriminate against others based on the silliest of features. Humans evolved primarily in tribes, which were close-knit groups of under thirty families. It's fair to assume that most members of the tribe were extraordinarily similar: same language, similar genetic makeup, technological sophistication, skin color, etc. For this and other reasons, we've evolved to have a preference for things that remind us of us - for example, we prefer things that begin with the same letter as our own name. The flip side of our bias for things that are similar to us is that we are biased against unfamiliar things, and people. This bias has had truly tragic consequences over the course of history, and has required heroism from MLK, Rosa Parks, and countless other members of the civil rights movement, to formally overturn. To deal fairly with our colleagues, fellow students, direct reports, (and potential US immigrants) we need to be aware of our bias for similarity and correct for it constantly. If you are looking for excellent writing by MLK, check out his Letter from Birmingham Jail.

Liked what you read? I am available for hire.