Saturday, February 19, 2011

Saving The egg!

For this lesson, we had to drop an egg from a certain height, and make sure it don't crack when it hits the bucket. We had 9 straws and around 2 feet of tape.
In the 5 steps of planning, I personally think that my group skimmed through step 1 really quickly. We knew we wanted to be successful, and we knew that we had 25 mins to plan this and 10 mins to make it. We also skimmed through step 2. We didn't plan out who was gonna do what. We just did what everyone else was doing, trying to design the device that will protect our egg and then make it happen. We ended up rushing the design stage, because we all forgot about it till the last 2 mins. For step 3, we spent a bit more time than the first two steps. We thought of a few ideas, and then went with the easiest one. I guess our device had a strong base, but the sides were left kind of unprotected. For step 4, as I explained earlier, we choose the easiest design, and we all just rushed on trying to build the protection device. I guess we didn't do that well of a job deciding who would do what. For step 5, we all knew that we were going to finish on time, but we didn't really know about the quality of our work. We went over it a few times with the extra time we had, and we thought that it was perfectly fine. But when we actually went up and dropped the egg, it cracked. At first we thought that it was perfectly fine, and we succeeded, only to find out a few short seconds later, that our precious egg has cracked.
I guess our planning for the device was decent. We did everything we wanted to, and the device came out kind of like how we wanted it to. The only downfall of our planning was that we did not give each other individual roles, and I guess that wasted some time. But in the end, it was fun, we got to know what kind of people we work as when we are put under pressure.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Culture Shock

Not one culture is the same as another. You can experience this though movies, tv shows, and even the music that we listen to. I was born and raised in Manhattan, so when I went back to Hong Kong, the environment was totally different. The food there was a lot less greaser, and the people were a lot more friendlier. They are a lot less rude, and actually apologize when they bump into you. Compared to New York, they give a lot more respect. I guess America just has a major pride issue. Chinese pop and American pop music is also totally different. And the difference between the nightlife! In New York, the nightlife usually ends at around 4ish or 5ish, but in Hong Kong, everything ends earlier.
The biggest cultural difference I found was that they respect their parents with a lot more respect than we do. With us, it's like we do whatever we want, we talk back to our parents and yell at them, but there, they hold back. They treat their parents with a lot more respect than we do.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Hi

Hey, my name is Raymond Cheung. I grew up in Manhattan, but moved to Brooklyn 8 years ago. I go to Baruch College, and is currently in Zicklan. I am majoring in Marketing... Probably.