Difference between revisions of "User:Eml27"

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==A Little About Me==
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Hello, I am Erick.
 
Hello, I am Erick.
  
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I will gladly give you Wilson Common Room Air Conditioning for help.
 
I will gladly give you Wilson Common Room Air Conditioning for help.
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Interesting article about Solar Energy becoming more economical:
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[ http://www.environmentalleader.com/2008/03/26/new-financial-models-make-solar-power-more-economical/ New Financial Models Make Solar Power More Economical ], Environmental Leader, created 26 March 2008 , accessed 18 September 2011, (Grand Challenge)
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==Homework 2 Stuff==
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====How to Pronounce my Name====
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Erick Lowe
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AIR-ick Lowe
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====Which Demo I Liked and Why====
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I liked the Game of Life demo most because it showed an entire completed program, not just the isolated individual processes.  I have not the slightest clue how to even approach writing a program like that, but I find it very interesting, and hopefully one day I will be capable of understanding just a fraction of what the program's author knew.  I also liked how the program eventually "settled," by the cells no longer moving.  It kind of made me think how all things typically tend to plateau out at some point.

Latest revision as of 15:24, 19 September 2011

A Little About Me

Hello, I am Erick.

I don't understand computers very well.

If you understand programming,

I will gladly give you Wilson Common Room Air Conditioning for help.


Interesting article about Solar Energy becoming more economical:


[ http://www.environmentalleader.com/2008/03/26/new-financial-models-make-solar-power-more-economical/ New Financial Models Make Solar Power More Economical ], Environmental Leader, created 26 March 2008 , accessed 18 September 2011, (Grand Challenge)

Homework 2 Stuff

How to Pronounce my Name

Erick Lowe

AIR-ick Lowe

Which Demo I Liked and Why

I liked the Game of Life demo most because it showed an entire completed program, not just the isolated individual processes. I have not the slightest clue how to even approach writing a program like that, but I find it very interesting, and hopefully one day I will be capable of understanding just a fraction of what the program's author knew. I also liked how the program eventually "settled," by the cells no longer moving. It kind of made me think how all things typically tend to plateau out at some point.