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newms

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Posts posted by newms

  1. I (again) have an international student question (meaning this might come as very obvious to some). I wonder if the stipends we get to live are taxable? Going over the the cost of living in Ann Arbor, I realized every penny I get is very valuable. 

    Yes our stipend is taxable - its been my experience that the University withholds around $350 in federal and state taxes per month - that's the bad news. The good news about this is that when it comes to filing taxes at tax time, I'm usually due a refund of a few hundred dollars.  

  2. Thanks for your reply. May I ask if your 800 rent covers other bills like water and electricity?

    I hope all can be covered by my 1000~1200 budget.

    It only covers water. I spend more on heat than on electricity in the winter, but at worse, my combined heat + electricity is less than 150.

  3. Hello guys,

     

    Is a monthly stipend of $2300 good enough for me and my wife to live in AA?

    Suppose around $1000~$1200 for rent.

     

    Thanks a lot :)

     

    Yes, it's enough to get by and you'll need to budget well. My wife and I get by on my stipend alone, but my rent is <800.

  4. I would try to avoid this. I remember having the same question when I was writing my SoP and eventually didn't include any references. If you're talking about seminal papers, then adcoms are probably already familiar with them. Plus, the SoP is supposed to be about you, so I would advise against taking valuable space in your SoP to talk about other people's work.

  5.  

    2-- Is there any international students out there? How are planning to deal with signing the lease thing? It is advised in this topic- for many times- that one should not leave finding a room to the last mins. Yet is it safe to sign a lease and pay the deposit before actually seeing the place? Or should I say, do people do that? 

    3-- U of M has a huge number of undergrads, which feels a bit scary as the town may turn out to be a very undergrad dominated place, any ideas?

     

    2) I am an international grad student here and when I moved I had signed my lease and scanned and emailed it. I think most places have some way of dealing with this issue, since there are so many international students here.

     

    3) The town isn't dominated by undergrads, especially not in the summer months. You'll be able to find many quiet spots away from the 'party scene'. Just avoid living in a place(house/apt etc) that has a lot of undergrads and you'll be fine.

  6. I'll be attending the University of Michigan come fall. I'm looking for a neighborhood where a.) I can pay a maximum of $400 for rent (I currently pay less than that in Chicago, so I feel this should be possible...right?) - this is, of course, with roommates - b.) I'm close enough to campus to walk and have access to a grocery store, as I am unlikely to have a car. Recommendations of where to look?

    The SPH buildings are on Central Campus but I've known people who are in SPH and live on Northwood - it's UM's on campus grad student housing, and take the school bus to Central. This is very doable (it's about a 15 min travel between campuses by bus). I don't live near Central myself, so I'm not very familiar with housing options there, but I don't see a lot of complexes - mainly houses where students rent rooms. I think $400 should be doable - you'll definitely need roommates. I haven't tried https://offcampushousing.umich.edu/ before, but it looks like an option. One thing to keep in mind is that there isn't a big grocery store within walking distance of Central Campus, but there is the Kroger on North Campus as CanRes mentions. People who live on Central and don't have a car tend to take the bus when grocery shopping. 

  7. Don't sell yourself short - I absolutely think you can get admitted to a good PhD program with your qualifications. Berkeley would be very unlikely but the other schools you listed are possibilities for a PhD application. You may not have good research experience, but that is not absolutely necessary, What is necessary though is that you can show enough promise to convince the admissions committee that you're worth a shot. To do so, think about a problem (i.e. not just an area, but a specific problem or problems) that you would be interested in working on in grad school. Find out as much as you can about it, and about the researchers working in that area. Apply only to schools that have profs actively working on the problem(s) you are interested in and when you write your SoPs write as if you are writing to those profs. By this I mean, write with detail about your problem and with enough grasp of the issues involved with the problem that you can get the attention of the profs at that schools who are working in that area.  

     

    So my advice to you would be, if you eventually want a PhD, apply directly to PhD programs - even if you don't have stellar (or even much) research experience. 

  8. What is the best way to look for places in Ann Arbor? I've never really had to search for my own apartments... I'd like to start looking for apartments for late summer/fall. Will be mostly around north campus, but would consider living more in the downtown sorta area as well as north campus. Thanks!

     

    There's always Craigslist and just looking at apartment complexes in the area. I'd caution against waiting until late summer/fall to look for housing - by then you'd likely only find pricier options.

  9. Are you sure that by having a high GRE score alone would get you into a decent program? I think your score is fine, you need to focus on publications if you don't have any, or relevant research experiences. For most of biological/physical science programs, the admission committee tends to focus more on your LoRs, SoP, and other accomplishments because they know that most of the GRE questions are pretty irrelevant to the scientific community.
    I agree with this. Your GRE scores are one of the least important parts of your application. How strong do you think your recommendation letters and your statement of purpose are? Those are much more important than your GRE.
  10. If you have something else which is actually portable, why don't you just leave your laptop at home running and set it and your router up so that you can ssh into it and run jobs? That's what I do with my desktop (though that's different because I work at home 95% of the time anyway). It's not hard to set up:

    1) Install an ssh server on your computer (OpenSSH for example)

    2) Get a free domain name from dyndns.com and install their daemon on the computer (to automatically update the IP of that domain name with whatever your computer's IP address might change to).

    3) Set up your computer to manually specify a fixed IP on the local network (instead of having it dynamically assigned by the router)

    4) Set up a port forward on your router from SSH and remote desktop ports to that port on the fixed local IP of your computer from step 3.

    Pretty painless. Of course it helps with responsiveness and reliability if you connect the computer to the router with an ethernet cable instead of wireless when you're away.

    That sounds interesting. I'll give it try - thanks!

  11. I went with getting a heavy duty gaming laptop and I have an ipad. My laptop is pretty powerful - more powerful than my office computer, so it helps when I have intense simulations to run. But it's a little hard to lug around since its about 10 lbs - part of me wishes I had a smaller laptop that I could just carry around and program wherever I am.

  12. Congrats on your admits! Were you able to visit the campuses and talk with possible advisors? Fit is always the most important thing, so I would say choose the school you think you would be most comfortable with (in terms of your interests). If you still can't decide based on the more important factors, such as research fit, advisors etc, maybe you could consider which location you would be happier at, since you'll be spending ~5 years there. It's a nice problem to have, congrats again.

  13. Toronto is excellent in AI and theory, and they (rightfully) compare themselves with a top 10 CS department in the US. UMass would be considered a top 20 US school for CS, although they would probably be in the top 10 for AI. I'm in AI so I'm not too sure about other areas. Both are good admits, you should probably think about which would be the better fit for your research interests. They are also in pretty different locations, big city vs not-so-urban, so you might want to think about that . You might also want to think about how graduates from both schools do on the job market. Congrats and good luck!

  14. Happens more often than you'd think. So usually professors meet and decide who they're accepting, then that gets passed to the department and the department does some paperwork. Sometime after that the grad school may do some paperwork as well, and then you get your formal notification from the school. So there may be a gap between when the admissions committee decides to accept you and when you're notified by the website or by official mail. If the professor says you're in, then you're very likely almost 100% certainly in (I'm guessing there may be very rare occasions where a graduate school overrules a department, or where for some reason expected funding isn't there). So congratulations!

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