Yayan

Joined 17 March 2017
953 bytes added ,  18 March 2017
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* ''Please state the timeframe (in UTC+0) when you feel most comfortable working during GSoC. Where are your time buffers?''
* ''Please state the timeframe (in UTC+0) when you feel most comfortable working during GSoC. Where are your time buffers?''


Being sincere, since I am currently on a PhD program my work load is very unstable. However, I plan to work on GSoC from 07:00 to 10:00 and 17:00 to 21:00 during the weekdays. Anyway, I am very flexible and surely the excitement of working on this will lead to many more hours even on weekends. I've been working in a private company and at the same time carrying my Master studies through a year and a half so I am quite good at managing my time.
Being sincere, since I am currently on a PhD program my work load is very unstable. However, I plan to work on GSoC from 07:00 to 10:00 and 17:00 to 21:00 during the weekdays. Anyway, I am very flexible and surely the excitement of working on this will lead to many more hours even on weekends. I have been working in a private company and at the same time carrying my Master studies through a year and a half so I am quite good at managing my time.


== E: Coding experience ==
== E: Coding experience ==
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I can access to an internet connection the whole day, not only on a computer but also on my smartphone. I expend about 10 hours per day in front of my computers and they are all synchronised so I can access my progressing work any time.
I can access to an internet connection the whole day, not only on a computer but also on my smartphone. I expend about 10 hours per day in front of my computers and they are all synchronised so I can access my progressing work any time.


* Please describe the degree to which you can install new software on computers you have access to.
* ''Please describe the degree to which you can install new software on computers you have access to.''
 
I can install anything on them.


== S: Self-assessment ==
== S: Self-assessment ==
* Please describe how useful criticism looks from your point of view as committing student.
* ''Please describe how useful criticism looks from your point of view as committing student.''
* How autonomous are you when developing:
 
** Do you like to discuss changes intensively and not start coding until you know what you want to do?
Constructive criticism is a key factor for improving one's skills and for creating better things. Someone told me once that if no one says nothing about your work that can only mean two things: it was perfectly done and no one knows how to improve it, or it is so regular that it does not seem useful or interesting to others - and the most common case is the second one. In addition, if you are not self-critic with your own work, that is a signal of being conformist. I do not like being conformist because that stops you from growing and learning.
** Do you like to code a proof of concept to 'see how it turns out', modifying that and taking the risk of having work thrown away if it doesn't match what the project or original proponent had in mind?
 
* ''How autonomous are you when developing:''
 
I am very used to working autonomously: in my past job I was in charge of a whole project myself and as a researcher I am very proactive. I like to think and design everything as perfectly as I can before writing code because I find this a good practice for saving time in the long term. However, I can understand that sometimes it is quite useful writing some toy prototypes that can evaluate your ideas. This is frequent in research when you do not know how something will turn out and you test it using tools like Octave that support perfectly a fast prototyping process. If the results are not satisfying they are never a failure if you learn from them!


== Y: Your task ==
== Y: Your task ==
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