Difference between revisions of "User:Aj167"

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*[http://www.sciencemag.org/content/311/5766/1380.full  Fusion Power: Will It Ever Come?], William E. Parkins, ''Science'', updated 10 March 2006, accessed 14 September 2013
 
*[http://www.sciencemag.org/content/311/5766/1380.full  Fusion Power: Will It Ever Come?], William E. Parkins, ''Science'', updated 10 March 2006, accessed 14 September 2013
 
*[http://www.technologyreview.com/article/406050/reverse-engineering-the-brain/ Reverse-Engineering the Brain],  Fred Hapgood, Technology Review, updated July 1, 2006, accessed 14 September 2013
 
*[http://www.technologyreview.com/article/406050/reverse-engineering-the-brain/ Reverse-Engineering the Brain],  Fred Hapgood, Technology Review, updated July 1, 2006, accessed 14 September 2013
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== My favorite Demonstration ==
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My favorite matlab demonstration was the Minesweeper. While I realized the amount of possibilities that matlab can create, ranging from 3-D graphs to bending structure/moving images, I had no idea the extent of its creativity. Minesweeper is the ultimate proof of matlab's ability to not only create academic pieces, but also generate more fun and creative things. Also, the 432 lines of coding for the minesweeper inspires me to create something of my own that would be both fun and creative.

Revision as of 03:52, 16 September 2013

About Me

I am a Class of 2017 student of the Pratt School of Engineering at Duke University. I am originally from Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, where I lived for 13 years. Then I moved to Almaty, Kazakhstan and studied there for a year. I studied my high school at Princeton, New Jersey.


Name Pronunciation

The way my family pronounces it, "Aibi Janat" sounds like "Eye-Bee" or like the "IB" test.

Aibi.jpg

Current Engineering Course

  • EGR 103: Computational Methods in Engineering

Grand Challenges for Engineering Articles

Among others, I posted the following articles to the Grand Challenges for Engineering page:

My favorite Demonstration

My favorite matlab demonstration was the Minesweeper. While I realized the amount of possibilities that matlab can create, ranging from 3-D graphs to bending structure/moving images, I had no idea the extent of its creativity. Minesweeper is the ultimate proof of matlab's ability to not only create academic pieces, but also generate more fun and creative things. Also, the 432 lines of coding for the minesweeper inspires me to create something of my own that would be both fun and creative.