Thursday, May 9, 2013

Purdude!! (Purdue University, Summer Internship, 2013)


Wow. I don’t know where to begin. The United States of America!! This place has left me spellbound. After all those Hollywood movies and certain epic scenes from Bollywood movies, coming to the United States fulfilled the dream of a young boy who wished to travel over the seven seas. The beginning was definitely discouraging and horrendous given my 36 hour delay thanks to goibibo.com-the stupidest website to book your flight tickets. It lures you into these schemes of cheap fares and then decides to change your flight dates without passing the correct information to you. Nevertheless, the feeling of being in the States superseded everything else.  

I went off to sleep in the empty bus. As all the students were heading towards their home, I was heading towards the university. Plus this was one of those bus rides where you get to change the time zone from central to eastern. As if my jet lag wasn’t enough to confuse me with the time. The free wifi helped me contact my professor and he reached the Purdue memorial union (PMU) to receive me. It felt great to finally meet my professor and have the company of someone whom I could talk to. I am not the loner kinds. I hate travelling alone. My professor is awesome. Purdue was bucolic and urban at the same time. It was such a picturesque and comely view that it reminded me of my freshmen year at IIT Guwahati. My professor took me to his place and took one of my luggage bags himself. He let me facebook on his macbook :P and let me chill in his awesome house. I am so glad to have such an amazing guide. 

Later, he came to my accommodation to see how my room was and spoke to my sub lessor’s friends. We peregrinated across the campus and he showed me various marts from where I could buy cheap groceries and which places are economical etc. Now which prof will take you on foot just so that you could remember the routes well? I felt happier every second.

Learning the ways..

I finally understood what a block meant! The numbering system in the US is so organized. Although I still hate the fact that the country hasn’t adopted metric system but the street and residential areas are so well organized. On the roads you will find one of the sides to be only odd numbered and the other side obviously even. The house numbers increase as you go north of the street and decrease south. On a major junction the street is divided as north and south and from the junction the numbering restarts. The main roads have a specific number assigned to them and it helps you identify how long the street is. Larger the number, smaller the length. The sign boards shape for the road number lets you know whether the road is connecting two states or it’s a highway or just a local road. It’s amazing.

Also, the pedestrians are given the priority. When you are on foot and you want to cross the road (obviously via zebra crossing) there is a push button for you to activate the walk sign. As this is manual the priority is given to the pedestrian to walk. Obviously you have to be careful though as a drunk retard wouldn’t care for you.  Everything here is online. One seldom uses cash. Everything’s by card. Even at the petrol pumps (or the gas stations here -_- ) you have to manually fill petrol. No one is waiting for you. Labour is crazy expensive here and petrol is crazy cheap. Plus here it is gallons. Extremely irritating. Anyway getting to know new stuff is always fun (obviously Americans don’t think so otherwise it would have been a “Kilometer”stone in their history). Hopefully I do well. Extremely excited and I hope this intern comes to fruition. 

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