Friday, February 24, 2023

Week 8 Learning Journal

 Part 1: Review Other Teams' Final Video Projects

SoCal Solutions: Cloud Computing

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZL4NR24kNK0

I think the topic is definitely well covered and the presentation is very clear. The quality of research is expansive and the video animations and everything are of good quality. For being engaging and interesting, it offers a lot of information but maybe a more friendly tone of voice would be better. 

GitReal: Machine Learning

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kA26VpeINlU

The topic is covered well, and the presentation is nice. There is a lot of information and it is shown that they have done expansive research into the topic. The video presentation is of fair quality, it utilizes PowerPoint which is nice. Maybe some more pictures. The topic is engaging. 

SSS - Extended Reality

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUuWiiSVBxs

The topic was definitely covered well and everything is clearly stated. The quality of the video is great, it is nice to hear some background music going along with the speaking. It allows the video to be more engaging and gives more stimulation to the viewer/hearer. The research is good. For some constructive criticism, perhaps making it a bit more engaging, but other than that it's great!

Part 2: Keeping Up

Here are the two links to the presentations my group did:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6lzE9uPCzNc

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1qa1yxRKiXg

One last entry: Overall in this class I learned a lot of things. From researching Google to partaking in writing a complete ethics paper, I can say that overall I learned how to be a better writer as well as a better student. The videos helped me to understand the right tips to be successful in college as well as be productive. Our team was amazing at communication, whenever someone had a question someone stepped in to help right away. The collaboration was very effective. How we can make it more effective next time is through preparing for our meetings more so that we can have more to talk about and spend more time efficiently. Other than that, I have no complaints and my team was absolutely awesome. 

Thursday, February 23, 2023

Book Report and Critique on The Power of Habits by Charles Duhigg (2012)



Book Report

This book illustrates the power of habits, as the title of the book conveys. Habits can be broken into a three-step process. First of all, there is the cue which is a trigger that tells your brain to go into automatic mode and which habit to use, then there is a routine which is something done and it can be physical, mental, or emotional, and last of all there is a reward which is an incentive to keep doing the habit or not. 

One of the first partakes of utilizing the power of habits according to the book was in the creation of the toothpaste Pepsodent. Back in the day, people didn't really brush their teeth. But when Hopkins used the habit loop to entice buyers to give in to this brushing teeth toothpaste, it became a nationwide thing to brush your teeth. The cue to entice people was mentioning that there was a certain film on your teeth and the reward after the routine of brushing them was beautiful teeth. There was a certain craving, a craving for that reward, that made Pepsodent so popular. This craving is a common theme amongst all the habits this book talks about. They are what drive habits.

Furthermore, the concept of changing an old habit into a new habit was in keeping the old cue and the old reward but now having a new routine. This Golden Rule has been used for treatments of alcoholism, obesity, obsessive-compulsive disorders and many more terrible behavioral patterns. 

Some more of the topics the book covers is Alcohol Anonymous which utilized habit reversal therapy to treat its people. Another thing noted was that during high-stress moments usually the good habits would fall apart. The author uses the Buccaneers football team to illustrate how during crucial points in the game, everything would fall apart because the team members wanted to try something different that could possibly make them earn points faster. But when they ignored following the cues of the habit loop pattern their coach taught them, basically they would lose. This is where the topic of "belief" comes into play. Even when in crucial moments when they could just give in to the bad habit or not, belief was crucial because if they had a strong belief in the positive habits rather than the bad ones, they didn't as easily cave in to the bad habit. 



Next are keystone habits. This topic focuses not on getting every single thing right, but instead uses a "key" factor and changes it that ultimately leverages everything else. An example of this was when Paul O'Neill became the CEO of the aluminum company Alcoa. He just focused on one thing - employee safety, and that alone leveraged the profits of Alcoa to an all-time high. He knew that was a "key" problem which affected every other part of the Alcoa company and he knew he had to fix it. That was one of the best decisions he had ever made. He used the power of habits, cue, routine, reward in order to fix safety habits within the workplace with a whole laid out system of reporting, replacing machinery if it broke down, redesigning of systems that weren't working, and more. 


The book goes on to cover why Michael Phelps was so successful, to talking about how self-discipline and self-control means greater academic performance rather than IQ, to the power of willpower, and more. Actually, willpower is like a muscle that you have to strengthen each time you use it. For instance, in the instance of ignoring a bunch of warm cookies and eating vegetables instead. Good habits come from good willpower. 

A cool thing that the book mentioned was planning for inflection points. Let's say you really need to lose weight. An inflection point would be the moment where the highest level of difficulty is there. Let's say, you're starving because you didn't have time to eat breakfast and you go to work and there's a big box of donuts right there for you to eat freely. This is an inflection point because you are starving and have to deny the temptation of eating those donuts for the sake of your goal of losing weight. So, when you prepare for this inflection point, like what you are going to do in that situation, you are more successful. 

Starbucks is an excellent example of utilizing the power of habits to train their employees to handle difficult situations. One of the key things Starbucks did is make the employees feel like they have a sense of control. When employees feel like they are just robots controlled by their employer, the rates of productivity decrease. Self-discipline increased when the coworkers were given more of a sense of freedom and control over their workplace. The tactics Starbucks used made it the worldwide-known company we have today. 


The next topic of the book is about the Civil Rights movement started by Rosa Parks when she refused to give up her seat in a bus. Her single act of defiance led to a movement that would completely change the world we live in, and it would not be this way without her. She is a hero. Along with Martin Luther King Jr. who also was a shining star in the movement. King led a set of behaviors that focused on forgiving their enemies and continue in peaceful protest. These good habits that spread like wildfire ultimately led to the federal judges ruling that the Montgomery's bus segregation law violated the Constitution. Then in 1964 the Civil Rights Act was signed by President Lyndon Johnson which outlawed all forms of segregation and discrimination against minorities and women.


The ending of the book focuses on how we must modify our habits and take responsibility for them. If it's truly out of our control, like something that happens when a sleep terror or sleepwalking occurs, we are not responsible. But when we continuously engage in something that is not beneficial for us with countless times to make amends, the author states we should be held accountable. There are plenty of opportunities to change our habits, and this book clearly shows them all. The question is: Are you ready to change your habits? That is a question we must all ask ourselves. 


Critique

This book mainly uses the power of storytelling to get its points across. I found myself thoroughly engaged even from just the first page, which usually doesn't happen to me. The book reels you in like a fish on a hook, and it easily engages with the reader no matter what level of knowledge you have. So, out of 10 stars I give this book a solid 8/10. The reason it's not a 10/10 is that I think it could've been organized a bit better. However, that was muffled out by how well the content was displayed and how interesting the information was. Learning about how habits work and how it was applied to a variety of different situations was especially interesting. Seeing when they work and when they don't and the different factors such as belief and willpower was so good to know. This will be a definitely good book to have around when I am an undergraduate student at CSUMB. It will help me remember the cues, routines, and rewards I need to set up for myself to be a successful student. Using this psychology of how a human brain works, I can see what works best for me and what doesn't. Overall, I am so happy I read this book! I hope and aim to be as aspiring of a leader as some of the people were in this book, such as Rosa Parks, trailblazing the way to the future. And I think you should read it too. 




Wednesday, February 22, 2023

Week 7 Learning Journal

 Part One

Our team collaborated on the final project seamlessly. The tool we used to communicate and share PPT files etc was through Discord. It is a very helpful application where you can multitask, talk over audio, and send all kinds of files so that sharing content is made easy. 

Next time, I will remember to use Discord in a large collaborative project, because it is a very effective tool to have everything in one place when planning your project. Something I will change next time; however, is for us to plan more early/ahead of time the project. 

Part Two

The Ted Talk video I watched was called "How to manage your time more effectively (according to machines)" Every operating system has a scheduler which tells the CPU how long to work on each task before switching. But when things go wrong, the computer can even get overwhelmed. Knowing the computer science of scheduling gives us insight into our own human struggle with time. 

It is actually more useful getting things done than thinking about what you are going to do. Spending more time ranking tasks than doing them is counterproductive. We must give up doing things in a pristine order in order to get things done, period. 

I also learned the idea of interrupt-coalescent. It means rather than dealing with interruptions as they come up, the system groups the interruptions together based on how long they can wait. It led to longer battery life of computers. 

From the presentation skills link, I learned that in PowerPoint slides it is necessary that the information on the slides are bullet points or general ideas of what you are saying. It should not be paragraph form or be exactly what the presenter is saying. It is very important, also, that the displays are made simple and do not take away from the speech that is being presented. 

From the presentation skills video, which is very funny at that, I learned a few key things. Don't have text swirling around on your PowerPoint, don't just use Times New Roman just because it's commonly accepted, don't use too many acronyms, and that there are a multitude of different pie charts. 

Monday, February 13, 2023

Week 6 Learning Journal

 Part 1: Help Your Teammates to Develop Capstone Ideas

We discussed our ideas together and Amela and I want to both do a mobile application. Oscar wants to make a website for data structures and algorithms that is a learning website. We discussed how we are passionate about these topics and went into further detail about how we would utilize the course material to make these capstone dreams a reality. 

Part 2: Keep Up With Your Learning Journal

What I learned from the video, "What companies are looking for in new hires" by Dr. Tao is that a lot of soft skills are highly valued in the workforce today. The list of them goes: dependable, communication, solve problems, teamwork, proactive, integrity, flexibility, confidence, learn, tech skills. My favorite out of these skills would probably be integrity. Having someone in the workplace who doesn't gossip on others, and who does their work wholeheartedly with no shady practices is a highly valuable asset today. With these people, you can trust them that they won't do something behind your back or see profit as over everything else. When it comes down to the wire, they will do what is right, not what would perhaps benefit them the most, if given the chance. 

I also watched the "Cracking the Coding Interview" video and learned what essential knowledge you should know going into the CS career field. I also learned a bit more about Big O, interview tactics, and more. 

As for our final presentation, we have a framework of what we are going to do and have outlined the different parts of the assignment. We plan to even meet in person to get things going faster. 

Lastly, I want to give an update about the Self Development book I am reading -- I learned about the football coach, Dungy, and how he used the habit loop in order to transform an entire football team from the lowest of losers to Superbowl Champions. It was so interesting reading this book this week and I look forward to continue reading it - as well as changing my habit loops (cue, routine, reward) so that they will benefit me in the years to come!  


Tuesday, February 7, 2023

Week 5 Learning Journal

 Part 1:

Commented on these blog posts:

https://amelaslearningjournal.blogspot.com/2023/01/week-4-learning-journal.html?sc=1675842134706#c5988150591539525545

https://bustyai.blogspot.com/2023/01/cst300-week-4.html?sc=1675842347184#c4052393555919993441


 Part 2:

The three possible capstone projects I might choose to do are:

1) Create a website with a database for a business of choice.

2) Create a mobile application. 

3) A case study of a software engineering subject.


Part 3:

I learned a multitude of interesting topics this week. First of all, when it comes to internships and graduate school I am on the fence. An internship is promising, but it does require a large amount of your time. I would ideally want to engage in a lighter-work internship with few hours that I can do in my spare time. As for graduate school, I don't know if I quite want to apply. I think if I research more into certain graduate programs that I might like, I will go down that route. As for now, I am focusing on my Bachelor's and getting that accomplished. 

I also learned about fallacies and loaded words. I wrote my discussion post on the Red Herring fallacy and it was interesting to see how many people use that fallacy in arguments. Especially in politics. My eyes were opened to what I should now be aware of in my essay and to not fall into a fallacy trap. Also, the loaded words were interesting to be aware of as well. Some of these include : "betray", "pest", "flinched" and more. I need to make sure to not use these in my essay. 

An update is that I am planning on doing the Self-Development Book Review. The book I chose was so interesting to read so far that I decided it was worth a shot. 

CST 462S - Service Learning

Overall, my experience working as a volunteer for NTS was great and I wouldn't have changed it any way! What went well?  I'd say ove...