Yesterday I got back my result of my last year of school in secondary education. I passed (yay!), and so did the rest of my class (congrats to all). This means I don’t have to learn the ridiculously restarted crap I had to study any more, and can focus on things relevant in a post-stone-age world. Of course, I’m entirely grateful for all the training I got, cause now I’m prepared for getting thrown back into time through some gap in the space-time-continuum
After doing a lot of searching for a school with a good course, I decided to go study Industrial Engineer Informatics at the University of Gent. Although I know most of the programming study material for the first two years, I’ll also get electronics, physics and chemistry.
Note: I re-posted this after my blog DB got lost, and only posted part of the original message.
I finally received my first Google Summer of Code payment.
This payment was in the form of a prepaid card send to me via mail, together with 2 GSoC stickers and a Google notebook – YAY! Getting the money from the card proved to be quite an ordeal though.
The first step required to getting the money from the card was registering on the citiprepaid website. To do this all GSoC students needed to fill in a form with your name, email and other info. You also had to enter your phone number. This is where it got funny. The form contains 3 fields to enter different parts of your phone number into, but only 2 of these are visible -> WTF??!! Since the phone number is required and must be valid, no one can submit the form without a workaround provided by another GSoC student: using the FireFox plugin Web Developer to display detailed form information, which would then also reveal the hidden field. Another issue here, although considerably smaller, is that only US numbers will be accepted, which forces all non-us residents participating in GSoC to enter a wrong number.
By making it impossible for non-geeks to successfully submit the registration form, citiprepaid now joins Argenta on my list of banks that try to fuck up their websites.
Anyway, I got my €350 from the card (although it took me at least 3 hours to get all the damned stuff fixed), so I’m happy ![]()

Categories
Tag Cloud
Blog RSS
Comments RSS
Last 50 Posts
Back
Void « Default
Life
Earth
Wind
Water
Fire
Light 