Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Korean Class = Hard

I have to do two presentations today. One is for Human Computer Interface class, one is for Korean class. The Human Computer Interface is a powerpoint and I finished it hours ago, and i'm presenting it in English, so it should be fine. The Korean class presentation, however... Well, I have to do that one in Korean and I have not yet written a single word. I have around 9 hours left until I have to present it. The news articles that the topic was taken from are ridiculously hard to understand. I have to look up roughly 60% of the words in a dictionary. It's a very slow process... At any rate, I have to present on the following question:

무상 급식을 반대하는 쪽에서는 그것에 쓰일 세금을 모아 고등학교 학비 지원을 하는 것이 우선이라는 주장을 합니다. 무상 급식을 찬성하는 쪽에서는 고등학교 학비 지원과 초등학교 급식비 지원은 별개의 문제라고 주장합니다. 여러분이 만일 정치가라면 어떤 입장을 취하고 어떤 근거를 제시하겠습니까? 발표해 봅시다.

In essence, should the Korean government implement a new tax to subsidize free cafeteria lunches for elementary, middle and high school students in Korea. This would be difficult enough for me to present about in English...

Anyways, apart from being busy, Korea is still excellent ^^.

-Curtis

Sunday, March 21, 2010

My Apartment

I remember someone (I think Tom?) asking me to post some pictures of my apartment, which I realize now that I haven't done yet. So, as per the ancient request, here are some pictures of my apartment from a couple weeks ago before I moved in. I'm sure it's considerably messier now... :S

There is also a desk with some overhead shelves and a small closet which I forgot to take a picture of. In the meantime I have somewhat unpacked and at least furnished my apartment with useful things like a floormat for the bathroom, some bowls, spoons, chopsticks and food for the cupboard, some sponges, laundry detergent, etc. Also, when I first moved in, things were ridiculously dusty and there were still some dirty dustpans and such lying around which I've cleaned up in the meantime. A couple more photos of the not-so-exciting view from outside my apartment. You need to climb quite a hill to get up here...


As a side note, that is quite the mess of wires...

~Curtis

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Scenic Shots from the Engineering Buildings

I took a few pictures of the engineering buildings when it snowed last week. It looks rather nice in the snow :). The engineering buildings also keep their snow for a lot longer as they are much higher up. These were all taken from behind the 301 building (301동).




재미있게 보세요~
Curtis

Gyeongju

It's now Friday here in Korea, and it seems that much time has passed since my last post again... I'm really bad at updating this regularly >_<. At any rate, this past weekend I went to Gyeongju (경주) with about 40 other exchange students and a couple Korean students as well. Gyeongju is in the south near Busan (부산) I believe, and it is famous for its history and magnificient temples. I hear it used to also be the capital city of one of the old Korean dynasties (don't ask me which one). We took a tour bus (all 45~ of us or so) which departed from the Seoul National University main gate at 7:00am. Here is a photo of the ones of us who got there a little too early...

Every person in this picture is either French or German. Can you tell who is French and who is German? I'll give you a hint, only two of them are German.

The trip to Gyeongju took a good 5 hours or so, and after a quick lunch with a million side dishes, we started sightseeing. This is one of the oldest astronomy towers in Korea. How it was more useful standing in this thing than just on plain ground I am not too sure. Apparently it has some sort of intricate design from which one can tell months of the lunar calendar or something, though. In the foreground of the picture are 3 Koreans and one guy from Finland. The guy on the right did a lot of the organizing and managing of everyone throughout the day. His name is Park Nam-Gi (박남기), but I prefer to call him Chairman Nam Gi-Nam (남기남 회장님) because that name is from a movie called Mokpo Gangster. The Chairman title just suits his organizing everyone during the trip :).

For the rest of the day we explored other relics of ancient times in Korea, most of which were not particularly extravagant looking, as the Japanese and Mongolians seem to have made sure that anything extravagant was destroyed :). Here is a photo of a tomb of sorts (I believe it's Queen Seon-Deok's):

After a lot of exhausting sightseeing, we went to dinner together which was unbelievably better than lunch. We had some sort of beef and seaweed hotpot thing which was quite delicious. After a couple bottles of Soju at the restaurant, we quickly went and checked into the hotel before resuming drinking. After getting settled in our rooms, about 30 of us went to a Hof together (similar to a pub) and shared a good 40 liters of beer or so and some Soju together. After that, back to the hotel to continue having some fun before bed. My room happened to be the biggest one (8 of us were sleeping there), so about 10-15 of us went to play some games there. Here is a pic of us sitting on the floor of our traditional Korean-style hotel room.

After that, we managed to get a good 3-5 hours of sleep before waking up bright and early for our 9am departure to continue our sightseeing. We first went to a beach where we saw an ocean tomb of some King as well as a large group of Koreans having a Buddhist ceremony. From there we went to Bulguksa (불국사), a giant temple which I actually visited once before with Tom and Chungkyu (이충규) two years ago. Here is a nice shot from a balcony on the temple.


After Bulguksa we had a short lunch and prepared for the long 5-hour drive back to Seoul. I slept for a decent chunk of the way and we made a roadstop somewhere along the highway where I had some delicious Hoddeok (호떡), a kind of warm pastry with honey inside. All in all it was a pretty nice trip, but I was glad to get some sleep when we finally got back to Seoul...

Until next time,

Curtis

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

First week of classes, Everland and Snow!

The first week of classes is now over and we are decently into the second week. I like my courses quite a bit so far. After a bit of revision, I am now taking Human Computer Interface, Artificial Intelligence, Data Structures, Logic Design and Advanced Korean for Foreigners.

I had the Korean class for the first time today and it was much harder than I anticipated! I originally tried to register for the intermediate level one but it conflicted with my time table. In this class, the professor speaks only in Korean, which is alright because she speaks very clearly and is quite understandable, but the writings we have to read are very difficult for me. Needless to say, I spent a lot of time pouring over the dictionary tonight when I got home...

Apart from that course, all of the others are taught in English, with the exception of a '15-minute summarization' in Korean at the end of each Human Computer Interface class. The Korean professors all seem extremely competent and their English is much better than I expected. The semester looks like it will be quite enjoyable :).

About a week ago or so (maybe a little more), I went exploring around Seoul with 윤경. Here is a picture from that day with a statue of King Sejong!


This weekend I went to Everland with some of the people from the SNU Buddy program. Everland is a big amusement park in Korea. We rode a decent chunk of the rides (I think so, at least). Most of them were pretty fun, but the cold weather made it less enjoyable than it could have been. I forgot my camera, so all I managed to get was this picture of the park map that I took a few minutes ago:

Today we had a strange bit of weather... I was kind of surprised, and displeased. It has been snowing for the past few hours now, and I went out to get some food with a friend from Australia and ended up taking a few pictures along the way. Here is the result of tonight's bit of snow (It was totally dry yesterday...).



It looks pretty and all, but i'm used to our lovely tempid weather in Victoria, and this is a little extreme for mid-March... It's -3 degrees at the moment.

As well, I also got a cell phone and made a bank account today. I couldn't make them up until this point because I didn't have my Alien Registration card yet (외국인 등록증). My phone isn't amazing, but it definitely seems to be better than the one I had in Canada! It was 80,000원 (about $75 CAD), and it comes with a few games, cable TV (just one channel, SBS), a couple radio news stations and the normal texting/calling, etc. It's a contract phone, but instead of a plan with a certain number of minutes/texts included, I just have the default 12,000원 per month plan with nothing included, and every text message costs 20원 and every 10 seconds of calling costs 18원 (incoming calls are free).


All in all, i'm pretty settled now and have most things that I need. All I need to do now is finish preparing my student card. This Thursday night or Friday I will hopefully get a chance to go meet Kurt Lee (이충규) in Cheonan (천안), as he has a few days of vacation from his military service.

Sorry for the lack of updates lately! I'm not used to this blogging business yet :P.

A la prochaine,
감사합니다

-Curtis