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peanutjellyfish

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Posts posted by peanutjellyfish

  1. I saw on the results page that someone was anxious about Berkeley's Information Management and Systems PhD so I thought I'd drop a note here

    I heard from a friend who is a current PhD student there that the application pool doubled this year (maybe because of covid) and they're planning to take 7ish students total (last year it was 8 or something, I forgot the exact number, but almost everyone ended up attending), and usually profs only take on 1-2 students each. Some interviews have already happened, and the faculty have a shortlist by mid-Jan. Also acceptances usually come through via a phone call from a potential advisor in late Jan. 

  2. For MS programs there's not really need-based financial aid and any kind of fellowship requires you taking the initiative to apply for and tend to be quite competitive. For Stanford, there is a possibility of tuition being covered if you try to TA a course every quarter. However, TAships are not guaranteed and they tend to be allocated to students who have taken a course before (so likely, a coterminal MS student who was previously at Stanford as an undergrad MS&E). 

  3. 18 minutes ago, masters_gmat said:

    Thanks for your response. I have missed out on NYU deadline as my GRE was scheduled after that. With regards to Cornell Tech, is it the same as cornell university. I've heard mixed reviews- is it like Harvard X or something like that? Also, which course would you recommend from Cornell.

    One more thing - I'm okay to move to a warmer place? if it's under top 20 like Columbia or provide good scholarship (huge opportunity cost for me to leave my 105k job). So, please suggest any other place as well if you have in mind. Thanks

    I haven't heard much about the MS programs at Cornell Tech, but there are several listed on the webpage about it. 

    Cornell University and Cornell Tech are essentially the same at the PhD-level, though, where students in both Computer Science and Information Science can be at either campus depending on where their advisor is. The professors at Cornell Tech tend to do work that have some sort of direct societal impact.  

  4. 54 minutes ago, yjkim192 said:

    But maybe AI/ML is...

    The call was for ML. 

    Edit: I suppose I should note that this information isn't very confident, because it's possible that these calls are part of acceptances, and they were just sorting out final details for some accepted students. 

  5. Hi! I'm not in a pure math program so I might not be too helpful, but I am a woman in computer science. I find that this corner of gradcafe does not have very many women so I'd suggest posting on Reddit (especially a forum for women in STEM) to get more responses. 

    Also, congrats on getting into a good PhD program! 

  6. How easy is it to get from Berkeley campus to SF (say, the Exploratorium or whatever)? Google Maps says 45-ish minutes, which surprises me because I've heard anecdotally that Berkeley students are closer to SF than say, their rivals across the bay. 

    Edit: Not that I think doing a PhD is going to give me any time to run around SF, but still....

  7. 4 minutes ago, shrek12 said:

    @peanutjellyfish good luck! I think there is another meeting on Fri next week too. I think it is not possible to have round up meeting in one day (as EECS is the biggest department in MIT)

    They should just split up EE and CS into two separate departments. Plenty of other schools do it. 

  8. Studio: ~$3,000 per month if you're not doing official campus housing and you're aiming for a 10 minute bike ride to the center of campus. 

    Apartment (if you split with other people): ~$1,000-$2,000 per month, if near campus. 

    A room in a house: $800-$1,500 per month, but the quality of these really vary. For example, I found a room next to campus that was like $1,000 a month but I wasn't allowed to use the kitchen. Many students who were previously undergrads here end up renting an entire house with their friends, which is much more enjoyable than say, co-living with your landlord. 

    Really, what matter is your transportation flexibility (and luck). If you have a car, you have tons more cheaper options since you could live in say, Redwood City, East Palo Alto, etc. I highly recommend grad students having a car, because it really opens up your mobility and helps you destress from the bubble-like atmosphere here. Sure, the Caltrain is nice and runs up and down the bay, but public transport around campus is more like a suburb than a major city. The campus shuttle is a bit slow and periodic, and you'll likely get tired of just downtown Palo Alto and Mountain View's Walmart. 

    But most importantly, if you have high/medium priority in Stanford's on-campus housing lottery, do that over anything else. You have plenty of time to be the cool grad student who lives some exciting life in SF (and endures a 1 hour commute) in the future if you so choose, but for your first few years, live close to everyone and in an environment where you're more able to meet others. Munger is one of the newer grad student residences and is definitely the fanciest and most spacious. Escondido Village is also great, though right now there's construction there so some buildings have suffered through more noise than others. In a few years from now a bunch of new buildings are going to be finished in EV and they'll be like, hotel quality. 

  9. Worries: I submitted my applications early, but I think I could have made them much better if I had sat with them longer. I think I forgot to explain more clearly and precisely what I wanted to do in the future, and perhaps spent too much talking about what I've done in the past (with the assumption that my future will look similar to my past). I'm also trying to balance getting into a good school and ending up in a good location. After some bouts of burn out and depression, I'm afraid that grad school will only make my mental health worse. On top of that, I'm doubting my abilities to succeed in the field that I aim to go into, and I'm also doubtful that I'll definitely enjoy the work I plan to do. 

    Excitement: Since I'm aiming to leave my undergrad institution, I'm excited to meet new professors and be in a new environment. I'm also excited for the possibility of changing my interests a little. I think I've gotten too deep into what I expect myself to be interested in rather than what I'm actually interested in, and a new environment might provide the motivation to take more risks and try new things. I thrive in collaborative environments and working closely with other students, so I'm excited to meet new colleagues as well. 

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