Thursday, August 20, 2020

Its like finding candy in your pocket

It’s like finding candy in your pocket… MIT is incredibly wired; wi-fi all over the campus. Students are likewise very into the Internet as you may have guessed, and as it should be in my opinion. Im sure we all fall victim to surrendering minutes and hours to the Internet aka procrastination. But is it me or are we all getting desensitized to the negative connotation of procrastination so that now it has become you know, a staple part of our day? Hey whatchu up to?   Procrastinating.   I dont blame us. The Internet these days is filled to the brim with appealing content things to make us laugh (memes), things to make us react in one way or another (Linsanity), things to make us stalkers (Facebook) just kidding. But sometimes! When I stumble upon neat stuff about my professors, I feel just a tad bit redeemed. Two examples from this past week. ONE. I was scrolling through my Tumblr dashboard (Tumblr is a micro-blogging platform by the way). Usually itd look something like this: A  New Yorker cartoon and a Jay-ZBeyoncé picture (Im a big fan.) But on one very exciting day last week, I saw this: Ok so Beyoncé is still there, but SAY WHAT? What is that interesting looking house with a seemingly robot face on the siding? I follow several Tumblrs that post pictures of fresh designs in architecture, etc. Usually I just look and admire, but this one I recognized. Its a design by my current architecture studio professor William OBrien. Needless to say, I was excited and promptly took a screenshot to share with everyone I knew. (You can read more about this work and others here) Then I went back to work. Possibly. TWO Several days passed and I was frolicking about online. Then someone  tipped me off about a MIT professor in Fast Companys article, The Worlds 50 Most Innovative Companies. I flipped and flipped and flipped through the pages until I saw this: (Images belong to Fast Company) Jan Wampler! My studio professor from last semester! If youve been following my posts, you might remember that I wrote about how one studio project last semester had us build our own shelter out of bamboo and canvas. Well, Jan took that project one step further in light of the Occupy Movement and worked to figure out shelter possibilities for Occupy protesters. And thats the story of how procrastination doesnt get your work done at all. But it does bring up points of interest. The End.

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