Sunday, April 26, 2009

Everything

So the semester is slowly drawing to a close, but my workload is nowhere close to lightening up. I had heard rumors at the beginning of the semester saying that the first five weeks are cake, but the last five weeks are utter insanity. I now know this to be true. The other persistent rumor is that while the workload is literally overwhelming, the course grade generally ends up being noticeably higher than what one might expect based on feedback. I can only hope this is true as well.

I have taken away a lot about the educational system here, and a lot of it can be brought back to provide some additional perspective toward my own studies, which is arguably the main point of an exchange program. To preface my observations, virtually every RPI student (along with a sizeable number of the other international students here) has come to the painful realization that this school is teaching Master’s-level classes, and with that comes Master’s-level expectations.

That being said, the courses are designed to place the bulk of the responsibility for learning the material in the students’ hands. There are very in-depth lectures, generally followed by exercises where seemingly every student is trying to get the professor’s attention for clarification, and a small number (with two of my four courses, that number is one) of outside projects that ultimately determine the grade. It has all come as a bit of a shock to me, because the RPI learning environment actually babies you along, so to speak, even in terms of course metrics like projects and exams. Frankly, I prefer the RPI environment, because it has never left me as overwhelmed as I’ve found myself lately, not to mention how fundamentally easier the courses are at the Bachelor’s level.

Now that the topic of education is out of the way, I have quite a few more observations from Denmark and elsewhere that I feel compelled to share. So in no particular order, here goes:

The weather here is incredibly predictable. Winter was absolutely terrible, because it was cold, cloudy, and painfully windy, with some sort of fittingly cold precipitation (usually rain, sometimes a little snow) making an appearance for at least a few hours a day. With very, very few exceptions, it was exactly like that every day until about late February/early March. Then it just became mild with some occasional scattered spots of sunshine, and very, very rarely, a little rain. When April came, the sun came out, and hasn’t gone away once. Every day is sunny and warm, with temps generally hovering around 60 to 65. There came a point where I actually got sick of seeing the sun so much. Truth.

I thought the Danes only really drank so much because the winters were so terrible. Turns out they drink a ton to pass the winter, then they drink a ton to celebrate the warm weather. Your liver never gets a break, but you will get a healthy bit of color because the drinking moves outside. The reason there are no open-container laws has become quite evident to me at this point.

The music you’ll find around here is unique to an extent. Scandinavia, as a whole, has seemingly acknowledged the fact that virtually nobody else speaks Danish/Swedish/Norwegian/Finnish (especially Finnish) and as a result, everybody speaks English incredibly well. I’ve touched on this before. The music, though, is a bit of a split. Most of the artists opt to sing in English because it opens them up to a far larger marketplace than they’d get singing in Danish, for example. Some of Denmark’s biggest exports of late are (and these are just examples) Mew, Grand Avenue, and Ida Corr. They’re all singing in English. The Top 20 charts, on the other hand, are mostly dominated by Danish acts. This track has seen a lot of club time lately, and it’s extraordinarily well-produced, even though only six million people can understand it, tops:

Same case for the Swedes:

(*Trivia fact: The chorus of the song is “Everybody that’s not dancing is a rapist.” It’s classy.)

Although there are some hometown heroes of sorts that sing in English but don’t really have any outside acceptance yet:

This stands in contrast to places like Germany (which I know have firsthand knowledge of thanks to my 2700-mile road trip) where it’s more or less a 50/50 mix of English worldwide hits (I seriously cannot listen to any more Lady Gaga or Katy Perry) and questionably-produced German music.

In terms of European radio, I ended up with a ton of exposure to it over the course of my grand European adventure, and it’s just as varied as the music itself is. Starting off in Sweden, with the exception of the previously-posted Swedish chart hits, pretty much everything was American. I blasted over the Oresund bridge to Rihanna’s “Disturbia”, for example. (It was nowhere near as climactic as I had hoped.) The DJs themselves had a tendency to randomly break into English for purposes of dramatic quotation, as well. Apart from that, it was more or less par for the course by American standards. Danish radio was similar, although there was more Danish music mixed in, and I didn’t hear a word of English.

Germany was different. Like I said before, there was far more German music, but I think that speaks more toward their culture than their entertainment industry. To put it simply, there’s a reason American have the option to learn German and French, but not Danish or Swedish. Also, virtually every radio station, at the very least the ones that broadcast to the Autobahn between major cities, seemed to be state-run, with newscasts at the top of every half-hour lasting at least 10 minutes. There were some incredibly interesting stations I picked up along the way, like 94F (I think?) in Munich that played sort of a mixture of old-school funk and new, indie hip-hop. Really different and really awesome, but my car’s radio lost it when I switched and couldn’t find it again. Web searches are coming up short, too, but it was fun while it lasted.

The culture differences present were pretty interesting, too. The advantage to traveling Europe on a road trip is that you not only get to see the major destinations at your own pace (in my case, an incredibly hurried pace) but you can see all the differences unfold before your own eyes. You can take in the language at the rest stops and even try to use it yourself (“Uhh… Pump zwei? Danke!”) By far the most fun switchover to witness was from one end of the Gotthard tunnel in Switzerland to the other. It’s typical German countryside all the way past Zurich (think Pennsylvania or Ohio – now you know why the Amish settled there) suddenly juxtaposed against the Alps, then once you clear the series of tunnels, you’re suddenly steeped in Swiss-Italian culture. Gone are the cute farmhouses, and suddenly you’re surrounded by palm trees and villas. It was seriously astonishing to see how much of an agent for change the Alps were.

In fact, pretty much everything about my swing through Ticino was utterly amazing. Thanks to the power of Facebook, I managed to track down some distant relatives that were still living in the village my family started out in, and not only did they all meet up and treat me to dinner my first night there, but Guido took the next day off to show me around the city of Lugano, Campione d’Italia across the lake, and Pugerna, the tiny village on a hillside where we all started out in (where I also had probably the greatest meal I’ve eaten in a long time!) I’m still in awe of not only the beauty and history I found myself surrounded with, but the hospitality I was shown as well. I appreciated the effort more than I can possibly express in words, and I will never forget the experience. I only wish I could have spent more time there!

The only real downside to my trip ended up being the rental. I did end up with a very comfortable and competent Volkswagen Golf five-door, which did everything I needed it to (including a couple of Autobahn speed jaunts) without complaint, but Europcar in Sweden had it fitted with studded snow tires, which created innumerable headaches over the entire course of the trip. Apart from the fact that the tires did nothing to help out my fuel economy, road stability, and noise levels, it turns out Germany has a complete ban on them (as I discovered at a surprise Friday night border stop en route to Berlin that I may or may not have run from) and Switzerland bans you from their highways, as well. I nearly had a heart attack getting on the highway in Ticino, since the Polizia, with their pristine blaze orange and white BMW wagons, had a surprise highway tax vignette check that I was afraid was going to prematurely end my journey at its southernmost point. As I did everything I could to maintain control over my bowels as my car slowly clack-clack-clacked down the queue, I was simply waved along. Not a fun 60 seconds, let me tell you.

In the end though, I can now cross Germany, Switzerland, Liechtenstein (hell yes!) and Austria (very briefly) off my list of countries to go to, and it was absolutely worth it. Unfortunately, I somehow have to try to top it over spring break next year, since road trips are now par for the course. I’m thinking California.

Next up, I need to get to Stockholm, and I’m even considering flying to Reykjavik. All assuming I survive the next few weeks of classes, anyway. We’ll see where that goes.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Pictures

Stroget, Copenhagen

Copenhagen Canals

Copenhagen City Hall

Malmo

Norreport Metro Station

Christianshavn

Heh, I forgot I said I was going to post pictures on here. Here are my personal favorite shots of the semester so far. I also have a ton on Facebook, too. Here's what's up there:

Album 1 | Album 2 | Album 3 | Album 4.

Enjoy!

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Pete’s Easter Break Adventure Thing

My apologies (again) for not being a more reliable blog-updater; however, there's been almost nothing update-worthy since my last post. My days have been primarily filled with classwork, with little in the way of travel or Danish observations to make. (When I do find little things along the way, they end up getting posted on my Twitter, so it might be worth sifting through the whining about schoolwork for those.)

However, the time has come when my educators reluctantly offer me a week off, so the traveling shall soon commence. Yes, I'll be breaking the already-loosely-defined theme of the blog, but it's sort of related. I guess. So, without further ado, my Easter break plans:

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To celebrate finally getting a week off, as well as to cross as many "must-see" places off of my list at once, I'm going on a trip. John and Tanya are coming with me, albeit for different legs of the journey.

Being a lazy American, the only appropriate way to embark on a journey of this magnitude is by automobile. And what better place to go on a week-long road trip than the land of the Autobahn?

Here's the gameplan:

Friday, April 3rd

  • Secure rental car from the Malmö South train station in Sweden at 8:30am. (Why Sweden? Denmark won't let me rent until I'm 23. Sweden's cool with 18, and they don't tack on any silly underage driver surcharge, either. Allegedly.)
  • Stock up on (relatively) cheap Swedish groceries.
  • Drive across the literally awe-inspiring (and friggin' expensive) Øresund Bridge
  • Hang around Copenhagen for the day doing cool things with the car until everybody's out of class and we can get on the road.
  • Drive for 7 hours to Berlin. (The ferries are too expensive and don't cut enough time out of the trip.)
  • Reflect on the fact that I drove through three countries in one day.
  • Partake in some of Berlin's renowned nightlife.

Saturday, April 4th

  • Do cool things around Berlin. Not sure exactly what yet, but it'll probably involve the Reichstag and the Wall and a bunch of other awesome historical things. I'm quite open to suggestions. Ideally, I'd spend more than a day in Berlin, but I only have a total of 6 days to work with and a lot of ground to cover.
  • Take advantage of the Autobahn to make it to the hostel in Bonn by nightfall.

Sunday, April 5th

  • Visit John's historical homeland of Königswinter.
  • Oh, I dunno, lap the Nordschleife a couple of times in my economy rental hatchback. (Don't tell Europcar.)
  • Hit Stuttgart. Obligatory stop by Porsche HQ. Maybe Mercedes too, if there's time.
  • End up in Zürich.

Monday, April 6th

  • Zürich. More cool things. Still not sure what they are, exactly, but it's one of the (if not the) biggest cities in Switzerland. Stop by the Swatch factory, or something. I dunno. Again, open to suggestions.
  • Brian-submitted suggestion: Lindt factory outside of Zürich. Still not sure if they give tours, but it's close enough that I can just drive by and take pictures and be generally creepy like that.
  • Stop by the Paiste factory in the canton of Lucerne. Hit a ton of cymbals. Leave feeling strangely satisfied.
  • Drive through Swiss Alps. More awe.
  • End the day in my historical homeland (alright, my father's father's father's (father's?) homeland) of Lugano. Pretend I'm not as far removed from this part of the world as I actually am. This may involve wine.

Tuesday, April 7th

  • Hang out in Lugano. There's a lake. Unwind for a day… Almost.
  • Hit the road again, travelling across the Swiss Alps one last time.
  • Drive through the entirety of Liechtenstein. I'm setting aside maybe half an hour for that.
  • Sneak through Austria to get back into Germany.
  • End the evening in Munich. Get a stein of beer. Empty it. Repeat.

Wednesday, April 8th

  • Munich. I need to unfortunately spend the bulk of the afternoon and evening stone sober, but there'll still be room for beer. And of course, BMWs. Hopefully both simultaneously. Still open to suggestions.
  • Biggest day of Autobahn exploitation yet. Munich to Hamburg. Let's see what this underpowered VW Golf (or possibly diesel Audi A3 -- we'll find out at the check-in counter) is capable of.
  • End the evening (exhausted from almost a week of driving) in Hamburg.

Thursday, April 9th

  • Wander around Hamburg for whatever I have left of the morning to work with.
  • Hop in the car around 11am, drive flat-out to Malmö to return the car by 6pm.
  • Sleep.
Here's a more concise summary:


View Larger Map

The trip would be longer, but my mom is coming into town on Friday morning to ruin it all for me. (Kidding.)

Oh, I'm also going to London this weekend, too.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Academia, etc.

Those of you more familiar with my schedule may recall that classes at DTU began on February 2nd. It’s now February 10th, and I’m posting my “Hay lookit I’m taking classes while studying abroad!!1” entry now. Blame can be placed on a number of different factors, my laziness outside of class probably chief among them, but lately that laziness has only been exacerbated by the fact that the classes are incredibly hard. (I’ll try to stick with prose this time.)

First off, scheduling here is a bit unconventional by American standards. I’m accustomed to two-hour long courses offered at 8 am, 10 am, noon, 2 pm, whatever. Here, it’s a lot easier to remember when your classes start, because there are only morning classes and afternoon classes. Therefore I have eight hours of class on Monday, mornings only on Tuesday and Wednesday, and an afternoon class on Thursday. Awesomely enough, Fridays are wide-open.

Secondly, virtually everything here is project-based. I have zero exams to take this semester. Zero. I do have a number of final group projects to do, along with a handful of individual projects along the way, but otherwise, that’s it. This doesn’t mean that the classes are any easier – far from it. But considering that my academic downfall has consistently been exam performance, it’s a very welcome change.

As fantastic as this looks on paper, the perks are outweighed by the sheer difficulty of it all.

My ten-credit super-class, Design of Lean Production and Service Systems, is actually failing to live up to its intimidating-sounding title (although the eight hours a week it meets for may do it for some people) and is in fact surprisingly enjoyable. I’m in an awesome group, we have an interesting project, the course material seems relevant to my interests, the whole package. I’m pretty glad that this is the moneymaker for the credit load I’m transferring back home. It’s also my first and last class of the week, so it’s a nice buffer for everything else.

My Monday afternoon class, on the other hand, could not be any more of a nightmare. Advanced Data Analysis and Statistical Modeling. Compared to everything else, the course didn’t sound bad, and this is coming back to RPI to fulfill my Statistical Analysis requirement, a relatively innocuous core class for my major. This course spelled disaster from day one, though.

For starters, everybody else in the course, with the exception of a few other international students on the other side of the room, was an Informatics and Mathematical Modeling Master’s student. Next, I discovered that programming was involved. Despite my troubled history with computers, though, I figured it could be worse. I did well enough in Beginning C last semester, after all. Small consolation – we’re using R. Upon posting this on Twitter, all my Comp Sci major friends replied with “R? You need to know R? God, even I can’t handle R. Good luck.” At least I sort of understood the logic behind what I was supposed to be programming. Until yesterday, anyway, when it just completely kicked into another dimension. (I have the course notes uploaded; I can pass them along in case anybody’s looking to have nightmares about stats.) I can only hope that I make it through this alive, although the professor and TAs are very enthusiastic and more than willing to hold my hand the whole way.

Transport Network Optimization is a mixed bag. The course material is interesting – I did have to beg my advisor to let it transfer over, after all – but again, more programming is involved. The OPL Studio interface is wonderful to work with, especially in comparison to the R interfaces I’ve been working with, but picking up on the syntax is still pretty rough, and the math behind it all makes me wish I paid just a little more attention back in OR Methods. I should be able to figure it all out sooner or later, though, which is far more than I can say for ADA/SM. (I knew there was a reason I wasn't using acronyms here...)

Strategic Simulation of Dynamic Systems is still up in the air. I’ve only had one class so far, but it’s shaping up to be manageable enough. I’ll have to figure out ProModel, which is the last thing I need after all the programming I’ve been doing, but it’s something I’m almost guaranteed to need to know in the future, so that’s a plus.

In conclusion, or for those that have elected to skip through the whining, there’s still a lot on my plate (even after dropping the Ph.D.-level course I accidentally signed up for… Whoops) but it’s worth it so far.

--

Outside of the academic world, things are still going pretty well. There’s not much to do outside of classes since there’s not much campus life during the week (think office park) but the weekends have been making up for it rather nicely. The guys in my dorm are committed to keeping things interesting around here, and my orientation group is still getting together pretty often, which, as geeky as that sounds, really isn’t. Awesome bunch of people, all around.

Also on the upside, I finally have a working phone (like anybody’s going to call me) and a bike. Only problem with the latter is that I found out it has a built-in lock the hard way. I’m hoping to get that sorted out (probably using a saw) with the campus support staff tomorrow afternoon, assuming they don’t have me arrested for it.

Oh, and I get to see a New Jersey band next week. In Europe. About a year and a half after they started playing basement shows. That should be pretty awesome.

I put some more pictures up here, so you can peruse those until I figure out what to post next. Probably something about food.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Denmark.

My apologies for not getting around to this sooner, but the whole moving-to-a-new-country thing is surprisingly hectic. As of this past Monday, I’m now a resident of Denmark. It’s still taking a while to wrap my head around that, but so far it’s pretty damn enjoyable.

It’s pretty difficult to describe exactly what’s happened so far, because there were a lot of mundane details to the entire process, but on the other hand, there a few interesting discoveries along the way. For purposes of efficiency, here’s a bulleted list.

- Would it have killed the REACH office to set our coordinators up with a rental van or something so we didn’t have to pool our money for a taxi from the airport? You’re sending them over so they can “pick us up” from the airport, only to point us to the taxi stand.
- I’m still going through iPhone withdrawal.
- The sun rises way too late and sets way too early.
- Jet lag turns me into a morning person. Out of bed by 7:30, sleepy by 10:30. Great for productivity, bad for socializing.
- Foreign plates here are basically like out-of-state plates back home. The cars with Swedish plates driving around Copenhagen’s belt road are just like cars with New Jersey plates in Manhattan.
- Thievery Corporation’s “The Cosmic Game” album is the best soundtrack for wandering around here. This is good, because walking is basically my exclusive mode of transportation now.
- While I’m inherently alienated by structured get-to-know-you orientation events, it actually helped me get to know people surprisingly well. I can now count Danes, Swedes, Germans, Poles, Czechs, Italians, Frenchmen, Indians, Australians, and even more Americans amongst my friends.
- After a few beers, I tend to whine about American culture a lot. However, the consensus from the global community I’m party to seems to be that America is finally turning itself around.
- No matter what country you’re from, one thing is sure to unite you: Penis jokes.
- Bars are expensive. Picking up a 6-pack of Carlsberg from the 7-11, however, is not.
- The Carlsberg brewery tour is like Disney World for grown-ups, but with really good beer at the end.
- I have fulfilled my duty as an American abroad by consuming a Big Mac.
- Europeans love to dance. They do not understand American wallflower culture. My attempts to assimilate are nothing short of hilariously depressing.
- Pretty much everybody I’ve encountered speaks English remarkably well. Despite this, I still feel an incredible amount of guilt by simply being an American with this knowledge already under my belt and having everybody else seemingly bending over backwards to be able to communicate with me.
- It’s hard enough to read Danish, but you lose all hope of understanding it once you realize how it’s all pronounced.
- Danish keyboards have a very steep learning curve for Americans. It took me a good five minutes to discover how to type “@.” (Hint: There’s an “Alt Gr” key that calls up tertiary functions.)
- Danes love order. Jaywalking is a cardinal sin, and paperwork is a way of life.
- If you’re supposed to meet at 9 am and you arrive at 9 exactly, you’re late. This does not bode well for my 8 am classes.
- You. Need. A. Bike. In. Copenhagen. No exceptions.

I’ve uploaded a few initial pictures from the hold-your-hand intro week activities here, but there’ll be way, way more coming once I have a chance to move around on my own some more. I just signed up for a basic pay-as-you-go phone plan aimed at foreigners (calling abroad is pretty cheap, and in-network mobile-to-mobile is free, which is nice, because I think everybody else I know went with this carrier, too) and I’m still in the process of looking for a decent bike. Once I make it past that hurdle, life becomes a walk in the park. Apart from the whole classes thing, anyway.

So far, though, so good.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Beginnings

For the uninitiated, I'm Pete, a junior Industrial and Management Engineering major at RPI in Troy, NY. I have elected to study abroad this coming semester at the Technical University of Denmark, or simply DTU, just outside of Copenhagen in Denmark. I'm hoping to catalog all of my experiences here -- preparations, my daily grind, traveling, whatever else. When possible, I'll link over to my Flickr account for a first-person view.

While I still haven't left upstate New York yet, much work has already been put into getting this all to work out well. The entire process of applying to the REACH program here at RPI, along with all the subsequent steps involved following my acceptance, was pretty ridiculous. I honestly have no idea how I was accepted to this program in the first place; my academic record, although improving, is far from stellar. As far as I can tell, I'm the only student from my degree program heading abroad, so the lack of interest from the Decision Sciences department may have been a contributing factor.

Following that, there was a slew of paperwork thrown at me from virtually every direction. I had to actually apply to DTU, which was effectively a formality, fill out risk waivers and course plans, meet with the program coordinators and my student advisor on multiple occasions, and apply for a Danish student permit. There was probably more paperwork involved in making this work than I had to deal with in any of my courses this semester. I even ended up applying for the student permit at the consulate in New York during an unrelated trip down. It was all a bit much for my tastes, but it'll all be worth it as soon as I hop on the jet on January 25th.

I'm pretty excited.