Difference between revisions of "User:Ereit"

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*Chemistry101 - Christopher Roy
 
*Chemistry101 - Christopher Roy
 
===Grand Challenge Article===
 
===Grand Challenge Article===
[http://oliverkamm.typepad.com/blog/2008/03/preventing-nucl.html Preventing nuclear terrorism], Oliver Kamm, updated 30 March 2008, accessed 13 September 2015 (Grand Challenge: Prevent nuclear terror
+
[http://oliverkamm.typepad.com/blog/2008/03/preventing-nucl.html Preventing nuclear terrorism], Oliver Kamm, updated 30 March 2008, accessed 13 September 2015 (Grand Challenge: Prevent nuclear terror)
 +
===MATLAB Demonstration===
 +
My favorite MATLAB demonstration was the "2-D Plots" section because I thought I knew all of the 2-D graphs that could be made since I've taken a lot of math classes. The section taught me about such graphs as "stairstep plots" "errorbar plots" and "stem plots". I've been told one of the enlightening things in college is to learn how much you don't know, and I found it interesting that something that seems easy like 2-D plots can have so many graphs you may have never seen or heard of before.

Latest revision as of 22:51, 13 September 2015

About Me

My name is Eric Reit. I am a mechanical engineering student in the Pratt School of Engineering at Duke University. I live in Brown.

Name Pronunciation

My phonetic name is "AIR-ick Right", "AIR-ick Write", "AIR-ick Rite", or "AIR-ick Wright".

Current Courses

Fall 2015

  • Writing 101: The Problem of the Color Line - Peter Pihos
  • EGR103 - Rebecca Simmons, Michael Gustafson
  • Math 212 - Gregory Herschlag
  • Chemistry101 - Christopher Roy

Grand Challenge Article

Preventing nuclear terrorism, Oliver Kamm, updated 30 March 2008, accessed 13 September 2015 (Grand Challenge: Prevent nuclear terror)

MATLAB Demonstration

My favorite MATLAB demonstration was the "2-D Plots" section because I thought I knew all of the 2-D graphs that could be made since I've taken a lot of math classes. The section taught me about such graphs as "stairstep plots" "errorbar plots" and "stem plots". I've been told one of the enlightening things in college is to learn how much you don't know, and I found it interesting that something that seems easy like 2-D plots can have so many graphs you may have never seen or heard of before.