Difference between revisions of "User:Jb374"

From PrattWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Andrew (Jin Soo) Byun's Userpage for EGR103
+
==Andrew (Jin Soo) Byun's Userpage for EGR103==
 +
Hi, my name is Andrew Byun. I was born in Korea but went to Vancouver,Canada when I was in 6th grade. After about a year, I moved back to Seoul and after three years in korean middle school applied to boarding school in America, and enrolled to Northfield Mount Hermon School in MA. Always having wanted to build robots and mechanical structures, I decided to major in engineering. Now at Duke, I plan to major in Mechanical Engineering.
 +
 
 +
==Name Pronounciation==
 +
I usually go by Andrew in the states, but if you wish to call me by my Korean name, it goes like this:
 +
 
 +
Jean Su(pronounce this short) Bee-yeon
 +
 
 +
==Grand Challenge==
 +
*http://spectrum.ieee.org/biomedical/ethics/reverse-engineering-the-brain, Sally Adee, updated June 2008, accessed 08 September 2012 (Reverse Engineering the Brain)
 +
 
 +
==Favorite MATLAB demo==
 +
*My favorite MATLAB demo was the Werner Boy's Surface under the Gallery section. I liked it for the mathematical sophistication and the beauty of the graphic shape that was demonstrated by the MATLAB.

Latest revision as of 01:41, 11 September 2012

Andrew (Jin Soo) Byun's Userpage for EGR103

Hi, my name is Andrew Byun. I was born in Korea but went to Vancouver,Canada when I was in 6th grade. After about a year, I moved back to Seoul and after three years in korean middle school applied to boarding school in America, and enrolled to Northfield Mount Hermon School in MA. Always having wanted to build robots and mechanical structures, I decided to major in engineering. Now at Duke, I plan to major in Mechanical Engineering.

Name Pronounciation

I usually go by Andrew in the states, but if you wish to call me by my Korean name, it goes like this:

Jean Su(pronounce this short) Bee-yeon

Grand Challenge

Favorite MATLAB demo

  • My favorite MATLAB demo was the Werner Boy's Surface under the Gallery section. I liked it for the mathematical sophistication and the beauty of the graphic shape that was demonstrated by the MATLAB.