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Category: My Life

 
Posted Tuesday, November 04, 2008 by Hap Aziz

Growing up as the first child of immigrant parents, I developed very strong opinions and impressions of how culture influences attitudes regarding the value of education (as well as many other values).  My parents came to the United States in the late 1950s from East Pakistan, which is now Bangladesh—and which was originally part of India until 1948.  The Aziz family beachhead in the United States came about because my father got a scholarship to pursue his Master’s studies in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Michigan.  My father came to this country, completed his studies, then married my mother and brought her back over here to start our family.

The experience of getting the scholarship and coming to the U.S. had a profound effect on my father: it etched in his mind the power of education to pull a person out of near complete poverty into a life of wealth and security.  East Pakistan was at the time (and it still is as Bangladesh) one of the poorest countries in the world.  My father dedicated himself to his education there, on his own he found that he could take advantage of scholarship opportunities, and finally he left his homeland, traveling by train most of the way into Europe and then by ocean voyage (during which he was convinced he would die from sea sickness) across the Atlantic to arrive to the sight of Lady Liberty welcoming him to what would become his new homeland.  Upon arriving in New York, there was a telegram waiting for him from the University instructing him to take a train from there to Chicago, and then to travel the rest of the way by Greyhound.  When he looked up “Greyhound” in his pocket dictionary, he saw that it was a dog and said to himself, “If Americans can ride dogs, then so can I!”

Some of my earliest memories of my father involve education in some way or other.  I remember when we lived in Troy, New York, there were these two very large gas or oil storage tanks (like the kind that you see for holding oil before shipping).  I was maybe 3 years old at the time, but I remember clearly that every time we drove by those two tanks, my father would say to me, “As the pressure goes up, the volume goes down.”  My first science lesson.  It didn’t take me long to have that memorized, so that every time I saw the tanks, I would be the one to recite the lesson.  So that, at least, is my first memory of how it all started.

Growing up, it was much “more of the same.”  Everywhere my father discovered teaching moments.  A statement that I often heard was, “you are a boy of letters,” though I didn’t understand that one right away.  Before first grade, my father found out what text books I would be learning from that coming school year, and he would order them early in the summer.  Then he would have me do the lessons in the book, or he would assign to me lessons of his own devising.  Every day during the summer, I would do the work that he would leave for me from my books, and by the end of the summer, I was well ahead of my classmates when we started the academic year.  Talk about being well prepared!  We did this every summer until my junior year in high school… at which point I pulled a teenage rebellion.

But the ultimate message to me was that education was of primary importance in my life.  I was never allowed to take a job while in school, since our family philosophy was that school was my main job.  My parents never pulled me out of school for early starts on vacation as often did the parents of my classmates.  In fact, everything we did as a family was dependent upon our school schedule coming first.  My father died in 2002, before I completed my Master’s work—in fact, I finally went back in large part because of my father.  And when I told my mother I was accepted at UF in the Educational Technology doctoral program, I could tell she was pleased in the way that meant I was doing something that would have made my father very happy indeed.

The road I took, however, was not a straight shot.  I wasn’t a traditional student going immediately from high school to college—I chose instead to start working out of high school.  When I graduated, my family (father, mother, and two younger sisters) all moved back to Bangladesh, leaving me on my own here in the suburbs of Washington, DC, where I grew up.  I got a job with a courier company in the city and worked there for a little over a year before getting quitting.  The owner of the company classified me as having been “laid off” so I could collect unemployment until I found new work.  When I went to the DC unemployment office, I saw entire families sitting on the grounds outside the building, as though it was a picnic—people on blankets, in lawn chairs, and at card tables all entertaining themselves.  When I entered the building, there were several impossibly long lines, so I found the line I was supposed to be in and attached myself to the end of it.  Then I wait for it to move.  And waited.

After three hours of standing in the line and only having moved a few feet, I finally got fed up and left.  There were able-bodied men and women in that line, all waiting for their government hand out, many having brought friends and family members to keep them company and create the atmosphere of festivity out on the grounds.  Something clicked in my mind on that day, and on the way home (to the room I rented from a family) I stopped a restaurant called Pizza Italia in my neighborhood.  There was a Help Wanted sign in the window, so I went in, applied for the job of busboy, and I was hired on the spot.  Probably a good three quarters of the people waiting for their unemployment checks could have applied for and gotten that busboy job, but they chose instead to take the government handout and not have to work.  That was the point in time when I began my transformation from idealistic liberal youth into a conservative adult.  And working at Pizza Italia was the part of my life when I realized I should have gone to college as my father had wanted.  (Funny how parents turn out to be smarter than they seem!)

So while bussing tables, I began to consider my options.  I had no money, other than what I earned at the restaurant.  Fortunately, I could eat all the pizza and steak sandwiches (my favorite!) I wanted.  I talked to some friends that were going to the local community college.  So I went there and worked with a counselor to see how I could do the same, having almost no money.  I learned that I could get a Pell grant and some student loans… all on my own.  So that’s what I did, and now, about 27 years later, I’m working on my doctorate degree.

- Hap Aziz

Posted Tuesday, September 23, 2008 by Hap Aziz
Every so often, I like to play the game where I think of how much technology things cost when I first got them. For much of my life, I was a dedicated early adopter of all sorts of gadgets. Well, as the gadgets have become more complicated and more expensive, I've become much more comfortable waiting a little bit before picking up the latest and greatest. It may not be the latest anymore when I get it, but the significant price drop is always appreciated. Here are some of the devices I've picked up over the years:
  • the original IBM PC - this machine came with a whopping 16kb of RAM, a single sided floppy drive with a 160kb storage capacity, and a green monochrome monitor. The CPU ran at a blistering 4.77 MHz speed. The total cost to me, monitor included, was about $2700 in 1981.
  • Yamaha CD R/W drive - this was a tool necessary for my game company to burn master disks for reproduction. The drive had a 4x read speed and a blazing 2x write speed, and I got the drive for the bargain basement price of $3,000 in 1995. By the way, each recordable disk was a gold master, and they ran $10 apiece.
  • Hewlett Packard fax machine - in 1988, the communications consulting partnership I had needed to receive and send documents by fax. We considered leasing a machine, but we decided to make a purchase for the long-term instead, picking up the machine for a cool $2800.
  • 10 Mb hard drive - when it came time to upgrade my IBM PC, I found a great deal on a hard drive. 10 Mb of storage space (I'd never fill that up!), and only about 5 pounds. I got it cheap at $600. (Yes, that was 10 Megabytes of storage space.)
  • NEC 3D Multisync monitor - Sometime in the early '90s (though I can't recall the exact date), I was so thrilled to get this $700 video monitor. It gave me an incredible 1024 x 768 interlaced resolution on a whopping 14" CRT. (Today I just ordered a 24" LCD monitor capable of a full 1920 x 1200 resolution for $269.)
  • Online BBS service - before the ubiquitous Internet and World Wide Web, I paid an hourly rate of $12.95 for my blazing 1200 baud connection. Ah, the good old days of getting a $400 montly bill to get an online text service.
There's a whole lot more, and I'm afraid to do a full inventory--I don't need to think about how much money I've spent to stay in the hi-tech club, especially now with my 401k taking a nosedive. But the more important point is the fact that the cost of technology has dropped so dramatically over the years, and it continues to do so. Free market innovation and competition takes the lion's share of the credit in that regard. All I can say is, keep the gadgets coming!

- Hap Aziz
Posted Thursday, September 11, 2008 by Hap Aziz
Seven years ago today as the terrible events unfolded, my wife and I were right in the middle of welcoming our baby girl into the world.  Our time at the hospital was very surrealistic; the nurse wouldn't stay in our room, preferring instead to watch television, and the people in the waiting area were sobbing as the news that morning was broadcast.  But for us, Emma's birth was a covering over us.  It was a reminder that even in the darkest of times, seeds of joy can blossom and grow.

Today, my wife and I visited Emma's school to have lunch with her and her classmates in 1st grade.  As we walked by a group of children in the parking lot, we overheard a teacher  explain to her students why the flag was flying at half staff.  The children seemed to take it all in with a look of solemnity and understanding, but without that posture of despair that so many adults experience.  And in the lunchroom, the seriousness of the anniversary gave way to delightful laughter as the children traded french fries for cookies and got icing all over their faces from the birthday cake Emma chose for us to bring to share.

The day was a wonderful reminder that as long as there are children in our lives, joy trumps tragedy.

- Hap Aziz
Posted Friday, November 30, 2007 by Mark Krupinski

It was in the fall of 1985 when I had gotten the money together to get my second computer.  The first one I bought in 1981—it was one of the original IBM PCs: a 64 kilobyte machine running at a whopping 4.77 Mhz.  The CRT display was a monochrome green screen, and any graphics rendered came from special ASCII characters.  I had enhanced and upgraded my PC over the years, but I was finally ready to ditch the dinosaur for the next generation: an IBM AT.  That was certainly an upgrade from the PC, but really just more of the same: more RAM, more speed, more storage capacity, etc. rather than anything groundbreaking or truly innovative.

It was with “cash in hand” that I walked into a computer store and started looking around at the different machines on display.  And it was when I was browsing the machines that I first discovered the Commodore Amiga computer.  This was a different breed of computer, and I was instantly hooked.  4096 colors instead of 16.  Stereo output that could actually play audio samples instead of a limited number of beeps.  Voice synthesis.  And the ability to output its video signal in the NTSC format for direct recording by video tape.

I could wax poetic about the Amiga, but if you really want to hear more, feel free to give me a shout.  The point I want to make is that when the Amiga came on the scene, it represented a paradigm shift in how people thought of personal computers and how they ultimately could be used.  Before the Amiga, serious personal computers were working machines; that is, they were used for things like word processing and creating spreadsheets.  Sure, some were used for game playing, and the Mac was even thought of as a desktop publishing tool… but when it comes down to it, how far out of the box can you get with desktop publishing?

Yeah, it was in the second half of 1985 that the personal computing world took a tremendous turn down the road that has brought us to amazing visuals and animations almost indistinguishable from the real thing.  That little box on our desktop can easily reproduce the sounds of every instrument in a full orchestra… or play back for us the complete symphony experience in all its audio/visual glory.  The tools that were once the domain of only high-end computer effects studios are now available even the most casual hobbyist—and, of course, to Rasmussen students.  These are new and exciting times, when a single digital designer can have access to such computer power.

And what’s to be done?  Sure, I can quote Peter Parker’s Uncle Ben, “With great power comes great responsibility,” and that wouldn’t be overstating the case.  Issues of ethics and morality in digital design are being argued on a daily basis and can have profound effects on the fabric of our society.  Just what is our responsibility as artists and developers when young adults act out the fantasies of Grand Theft Auto, for example?  Or we can consider the inspirational—who are the da Vincis of our time, the Renaissance men and women pushing the boundaries or our arts and technologies aside with every click of the mouse?   

Yes, we do live in interesting times. 

I think we can take a break every now and then to explore where we are and where we’re headed.  Let this blog be our vehicle to explore our expression.  We’re bound to find something of interest and of value along the way.

- Hap Aziz