Difference between revisions of "User:Mvn3"
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Hi! My name is Mike Niemi, I'm a freshman in Pratt and looking at ME. I took Trinity classes last semester so I'm taking EGR53 now. Along with going to school, I'm a competitive cyclist who has raced with amateur teams for the past few years and I now plan to race for [http://www.dukecycling.org/ Duke Cycling]. | Hi! My name is Mike Niemi, I'm a freshman in Pratt and looking at ME. I took Trinity classes last semester so I'm taking EGR53 now. Along with going to school, I'm a competitive cyclist who has raced with amateur teams for the past few years and I now plan to race for [http://www.dukecycling.org/ Duke Cycling]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | As for the Engineering Grand Challenges, I find Securing Cyberspace to be one of the most interesting, as its impact on the world is only going to grow much faster than any of the others. An exciting and terryifying event happened recently concerning this challenge, when Google and many other major corporations computers were penetrated by a machine in China.[http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/15/world/asia/15diplo.html After Google’s Stand on China, U.S. Treads Lightly ], David Sanger and John Markoff, The New York Times, published January 14, 2010, accessed January 31, 2010 (Securing Cyberspace). |
Revision as of 03:56, 1 February 2010
Hi! My name is Mike Niemi, I'm a freshman in Pratt and looking at ME. I took Trinity classes last semester so I'm taking EGR53 now. Along with going to school, I'm a competitive cyclist who has raced with amateur teams for the past few years and I now plan to race for Duke Cycling.
As for the Engineering Grand Challenges, I find Securing Cyberspace to be one of the most interesting, as its impact on the world is only going to grow much faster than any of the others. An exciting and terryifying event happened recently concerning this challenge, when Google and many other major corporations computers were penetrated by a machine in China.After Google’s Stand on China, U.S. Treads Lightly , David Sanger and John Markoff, The New York Times, published January 14, 2010, accessed January 31, 2010 (Securing Cyberspace).