I don't know if I could have passed my first year under the same circumstances students coming from abroad have. The first year is demanding and pushes you to the limits. Lots of respect to her and all the students at ETH.
I was in her shoes when I first arrived Belgium to further my education especially in a field I had little or no experience in , my first year was hell for me. I was depressed , home sick , lost my sociality touch , I could not study , I was always lost in class, I thought leaving the shores of my country was not the best decision for me . My class mates thought I was this dump African student 😂😂. I can relate very well. Buh, right now , I have very much adapted to being an international student. I am in my second year now and fighting to make distinctions in all my courses I failed and the ones to come.i am glad I came and was able to survive.
@@tellurium3754 Is it really though? If you don't go to ETH then your academic struggles are worthless? Super condescending comment, wouldn't want to talk to you at a party.
All the very best to you. I am an Indian doing my Master's in Germany. I understand very well how you would have felt, since I am also going through the same phase. Now towards the end of my first semester, with the exams fast approaching in, I understand where I was lacking, what all challenges I was scared of facing, but now my mindset is becoming more clear, and I know I will also win over all the challenges and emerge out as a winner. I also pray the same for you.
We started CS in the same year, yet I was at the opposite spectrum of the student body and I struggled a lot, even with a perfect support system and lots of prior knowlegde. I have an insane level of respect for students like you and how you somehow manage to not break under all this additional pressure. I am sorry you had to endure this weird, ego-fuelled atmosphere where everyone else seems to be doing better than you and no one admits how hard it is.
Yup. And universities only display students like this, that somehow don't crack under all the pressure, and that manage to keep their mental health in check. The 1 %. So that the universities may maintain their polished facade. It's ridiculous the amount of talent that is lost due to the superhuman pressure sieve that technical universities put first year students through.
@@RedBar3D Idk, its not like its going to get any easier once you land that 60 hour a week fancy tech job. Unis are not doing any wrong here. Its business, after all. Students should help each other out, simple as that.
@@onefulltimeequivalent1230 I have to disagree. The job of universities should imo be to accumulate talented people and make them knowledgeable within the area of study. They are not doing that. For one, they are missing out on a ton of talent. Secondly, a degree is no guarantee you know your stuff; precisely because of the heavy workload, many students "cheat" the system and focus on getting just enough points to pass their courses, in stead of actually taking the material to heart.
@@RedBar3D This is a consequence not only of, as you said the workload, but also the emphasis on grades and certificates being the ultimate reward to strive for. As long as the reward is removed from the essence of the task itself one reaps half as much as one could from it. That's why I think self study is the best route, once the activity itself becomes the reward, it becomes a natural thing to delve deeper and deeper without much resistance until one day you look up and you have the topic under your full control
My skills are in art and music, and I spent most of my life perfecting and honing those skills. There wasn’t much of a career in those, and I didn’t want to spend thousands of dollars in a study which I could just pursue on the side (I’m from the US, US colleges are more expensive). Then I majored in CS. It was tough in the beginning, not only the math, but understanding the logic of completing puzzles, then figuring how to create those puzzle pieces and have them fall into place all in code. I felt behind from peers who coded since they were young or during HS. I felt discouraged and questioned many times if CS was for me. But I stuck to it, and I feel I have come a long way since I written my first code. It has opened me to a new outlook on things and showed that I can combine CS with my art skills in careers like game development or stack development. If anything I think it enhanced my skills as I gained a new perspective. I still have a lot to learn and it’s a long journey ahead, but remember, go at your own pace. Slow and steady wins the race. Don’t mind your peers and just on YOU! Take your time with these concepts and have fun with it! Even make small coding projects that help you understand the concepts better. Most importantly, remember you are capable!
In my case, the difficulty was entering the strongly practical side of the courses. In Italy I was top class, but it was just matter of studying for your exams, getting full grades. Here I faced my first challenging projects, in which maybe my supervisors did not know the answers for the problem and I could give my contribute. After a project which I gave up, I made it and graduated. Now I am doing an internship, always under the ETH wing and looking for new interesting challenges!
@@draugh1r219 molta più pratica, ci si cimenta con progetti molto più innovativi e tosti. Spesso manco il prof sa dove si possa arrivare con i risultati. I voti non sono straimportanti, poi ci sono molti progetti extracurriculari che vale la pena provare.
yes. happens a lot in cs, a lot of people go to college already knowing how to code and this can be intimidating for many "new cs people". I guess the important thing to remember is that everybody starts somewhere.
@@danilo2735 in my experience, people with medium coding experience struggle a lot in cs, as they didn't learn the concepts right and have a hard time to adapt to the way it's done / the university wishes. A bit or a lot of experience are great, though. Maybe it is because medium experience makes you think it should be easy. So never be too fearful about less experience in coding when starting to study
I finally found her again. Im so glad! Thankyou ETH Zurich. And dear brain, dont ever forget about ther okay? Shes the reason why im studying Math and Physics
What ETH Zurich and RTX 3080 have in common? - You can watch about it on youtube. - You can dream to reach. And thats how far you gonna get if you are not %1. edit: But hey you can still have intel integrated right :D
I'm a 1st semester student too who just completed 1 month of college in Electronics Engineering a couple of days ago. My college is in my own country, just about 100km from my hometown and I'm currently studying online from the comforts of home due to COVID restrictions. But I can still totally relate to Selin! The studies do feel overburdening. I do feel overwhelmed and out of place sometimes, even though Electronics has been my childhood passion and I have chosen this field out of my own choice. It feels like I have grown up from a kid into an adult within a snap. However, all these feelings have so far had a positive impact on me. They are somehow making me more motivated and confident rather than depressed. And watching this video made me even more relived, that I'm not the only one going through all this. So, if you are a 1st year student too who is feeling overwhelmed with college, I want you to know that you'll get through it. Just hold on!
I like listen to you talking, clear, really confident and thoughful. So much respect for you and hope to see you passing by someday at the ETH. Wish you much success and contentment in 2022.
So is it possible for a bachelor student of mechanical engineering to enroll in a masters CS programme? And if it is possible what would the necessary pre requisites be?
It took me 3 years to get past that point. Im six years in my chemistry bachelors, finishing it this semester, became a fitness instructor and finished a coding bootcamp, currently working as a junior developer :) Keep going, you will all make it.
CS classes are the worst at this. You'll have people who have never coded before sitting next to people who have coded their whole lives, all because everyone has to take the same intro to programing courses.
Lol i got a bachelors in engineering while working full time. GL lady! Glad she didnt go through what i went through because she would go bald like i did
@@adarshjha1300 yes bro, it may be possible but chances are low, people with Math major or Electrical engineering backgroung sometimes choose CS as their masters
yani olması gerektiği gibi olmuş, alman lisesi sonrası almanyaya gitmek. abi çok tuhaf ya, sacma sapan bir ortaokul hayatı, sonra anadoluda bir lise.. çabala çabala çabala, eskiden ne yapayım benim payıma da bu düşmüş diyordum ama o kadar koymuyordu, simdi ne zaman desem icim 😣
maalesef fırsatlar hiçbir zaman adil olmadı, olmayacak da, olmasına da imkan yok zaten. sınırlarımızı zorlamaktan başka çare yok, nerede olursak olalım.
Bu bakış açısını sevmiyorum. Yani, evet herkes kendi koşulları içerisinde değerlendirilmeli. Bizim koşullarımız, önceden bize sorulsa tercih etmeyeceğimiz koşullar olabilir. Bu koşullar içerisinde olmayı biz istemedik ama bu koşullar içerisinde yaşamayı biz istiyoruz (yaşamaya devam ederek bunu yapıyoruz), istediğimiz zaman bunu sonlandırma imkanımız da var. Bu durumda karar vermemiz gereken bir durum var: Bunu sonlandıracak mıyız, yok sonlandırmayacak mıyız? Eğer sonlandırmıyor, yaşamaya devam ediyorsak bu bakış açısından sıyrılıp sürekli mücadele etmek gerekiyor. Tabi, yukarıda bahsettiğim kararı sadece bir kere vermiyoruz, yaşadığımız sürece birçok kez bu kararı gözden geçirmek gerekiyor.
Okay its good.But u need marks dude.U cannot apply anywhere if u have poor marks.After being selected, they will tell u its very easy to do.But no one will u, u have to work like hell to get there
The first year is officially in German but will contain a lot of English: most material will be English but the professor might speak German. You can pass the first year with basic German skills.
She isn't. She just won't meld well with computer science, and she may change education path. CS has a lot of toxicity, and at least in my experience they don't take studying seriously. It's basically full of kids who won't grow up, and do not want to put in any effort. They'll ride on whatever experience they have from before starting studies, try to be cocky, and then they fail as soon as new things are introduced. People who really want to be "a gifted child" but either just plain and simply aren't, or are very lazy, and want to find a subject that doesn't take too much effort while making him/her feel like they're "gifted". TL;DR: CS is full of kids with superiority complexes, and it'll be difficult to blend in if you're a "normal" person.
@@muuubiee Very one sided view, for sure. I have no clue where you coming from and what you are actually trying to tell us. I was referring to hard work that needs to be connected with CS, which should be true for any kind of subject. Though, To be a strong developer you have to have a hole bunch of background knowledge, which I believe requires additional effort.
Welcome to Computer Science, It is so hard independent your studying place. Maybe, If you study in Turkey It may more hard because you work also to stay at life against economy & unknown dangerouses at the same time. I hope so you will more succesfull and happy :))) ✨❇
Her english is really good for a Turk. I didn't know english proficiency was that high over there, maybe it's because she lives in switzerland, but i thought they spoke french and german in switzerland? (zurich is german, no?) In india, we learn programming starting from 9th standard, atleast if you take the central board, so most students have atleast written some simple BASIC programs by college and i think it helps. I never felt pressurized in my engineering course, except that in the 1st year we do chemistry, physics and other subjects which i think is kind of pointless.
Why is taking some basic classes outside of your main focus "point less"? Are you that independent, as a human being, that you grow your own foods, build your own shelter, make your own shoes and clothes, do your own medical check-ups or surgeries when you're sick, etc? We need to be able to relate to other human beings & what they do for humanity..... We need to understand, to some good degrees, who biology, chemistry, business, agriculture, ecology, history, linguistics, etc work ... so regardless what specialty we are in, we able to relate to our fellow human beings whom WE DEPEND on, from hour to hour, day to day. Try not eating --- for just 5 days --- the foods grown by some lowly farm workers and see how good you feel, when you're doing your engineering activities.
@@user-xv1gz8bd1d I Know...but sometimes in these serious discussions...there should be something fun..right...I mean I am complementing her...maybe it will put smile in her face...I used hot instead of beautiful...when someone says hot...They have overall good looking personality!I guess the term is overrated and been confused from a very long time as a slang..I am so not referring to that here...BTW she's hot!
@@danielchandra9985 I know you don't mean it bad, but as a female student i can tell you this, we don't see being described as "hot" as a compliment. With this you downgrade all her effort down to her appearance. You can say "pretty" but hot is sexual-sensitive, you imply something here :) This is my advice for you next time you talk to a female scholar directly/indirectly , because in reallife you don't hear that from them but some of them aren't really comfortable with this.
@@user-xv1gz8bd1d ohk....I got it!... She's pretty not hot...ok..got it.....You are a good person..and I know it's basic manner...so sorry for my childish funny behavior... BTW at least smile now!!!!!!It was pretty long chat conversation...hahaha
Anyone who meets the entry requirements is accepted to the ETH bachelor's degree. The selection process happens after the first year where around 40% fail the exams
I don't know if I could have passed my first year under the same circumstances students coming from abroad have. The first year is demanding and pushes you to the limits. Lots of respect to her and all the students at ETH.
I was in her shoes when I first arrived Belgium to further my education especially in a field I had little or no experience in , my first year was hell for me. I was depressed , home sick , lost my sociality touch , I could not study , I was always lost in class, I thought leaving the shores of my country was not the best decision for me . My class mates thought I was this dump African student 😂😂. I can relate very well. Buh, right now , I have very much adapted to being an international student. I am in my second year now and fighting to make distinctions in all my courses I failed and the ones to come.i am glad I came and was able to survive.
more power to you, keep going
I belive you but damn ETH is in another league sorry
More power to everyone of you! :)
@@tellurium3754 Is it really though? If you don't go to ETH then your academic struggles are worthless? Super condescending comment, wouldn't want to talk to you at a party.
All the very best to you. I am an Indian doing my Master's in Germany. I understand very well how you would have felt, since I am also going through the same phase. Now towards the end of my first semester, with the exams fast approaching in, I understand where I was lacking, what all challenges I was scared of facing, but now my mindset is becoming more clear, and I know I will also win over all the challenges and emerge out as a winner. I also pray the same for you.
We started CS in the same year, yet I was at the opposite spectrum of the student body and I struggled a lot, even with a perfect support system and lots of prior knowlegde. I have an insane level of respect for students like you and how you somehow manage to not break under all this additional pressure. I am sorry you had to endure this weird, ego-fuelled atmosphere where everyone else seems to be doing better than you and no one admits how hard it is.
Yup. And universities only display students like this, that somehow don't crack under all the pressure, and that manage to keep their mental health in check. The 1 %. So that the universities may maintain their polished facade. It's ridiculous the amount of talent that is lost due to the superhuman pressure sieve that technical universities put first year students through.
@@RedBar3D Idk, its not like its going to get any easier once you land that 60 hour a week fancy tech job. Unis are not doing any wrong here. Its business, after all. Students should help each other out, simple as that.
@@onefulltimeequivalent1230 I have to disagree. The job of universities should imo be to accumulate talented people and make them knowledgeable within the area of study. They are not doing that. For one, they are missing out on a ton of talent. Secondly, a degree is no guarantee you know your stuff; precisely because of the heavy workload, many students "cheat" the system and focus on getting just enough points to pass their courses, in stead of actually taking the material to heart.
@@RedBar3D This is a consequence not only of, as you said the workload, but also the emphasis on grades and certificates being the ultimate reward to strive for.
As long as the reward is removed from the essence of the task itself one reaps half as much as one could from it.
That's why I think self study is the best route, once the activity itself becomes the reward, it becomes a natural thing to delve deeper and deeper without much resistance until one day you look up and you have the topic under your full control
@@davyroger3773 I sympathize completely
My skills are in art and music, and I spent most of my life perfecting and honing those skills. There wasn’t much of a career in those, and I didn’t want to spend thousands of dollars in a study which I could just pursue on the side (I’m from the US, US colleges are more expensive). Then I majored in CS. It was tough in the beginning, not only the math, but understanding the logic of completing puzzles, then figuring how to create those puzzle pieces and have them fall into place all in code. I felt behind from peers who coded since they were young or during HS. I felt discouraged and questioned many times if CS was for me. But I stuck to it, and I feel I have come a long way since I written my first code. It has opened me to a new outlook on things and showed that I can combine CS with my art skills in careers like game development or stack development. If anything I think it enhanced my skills as I gained a new perspective. I still have a lot to learn and it’s a long journey ahead, but remember, go at your own pace. Slow and steady wins the race. Don’t mind your peers and just on YOU! Take your time with these concepts and have fun with it! Even make small coding projects that help you understand the concepts better. Most importantly, remember you are capable!
This girl has healing energy
She's gorgeous.
Basarilar Selin hanim. Ayni sektordeyiz ve ayni soyadina sahibiz. Umarim her sey gonlunce olur. =)
In my case, the difficulty was entering the strongly practical side of the courses. In Italy I was top class, but it was just matter of studying for your exams, getting full grades. Here I faced my first challenging projects, in which maybe my supervisors did not know the answers for the problem and I could give my contribute. After a project which I gave up, I made it and graduated. Now I am doing an internship, always under the ETH wing and looking for new interesting challenges!
cosa cambia rispetto all'uni italiana? tu come ti stai trovando?
@@draugh1r219 molta più pratica, ci si cimenta con progetti molto più innovativi e tosti. Spesso manco il prof sa dove si possa arrivare con i risultati. I voti non sono straimportanti, poi ci sono molti progetti extracurriculari che vale la pena provare.
"What are you playing?"
"I wrote this!"
That's enough to make me quit college 😢
yes. happens a lot in cs, a lot of people go to college already knowing how to code and this can be intimidating for many "new cs people". I guess the important thing to remember is that everybody starts somewhere.
@@danilo2735 in my experience, people with medium coding experience struggle a lot in cs, as they didn't learn the concepts right and have a hard time to adapt to the way it's done / the university wishes. A bit or a lot of experience are great, though. Maybe it is because medium experience makes you think it should be easy. So never be too fearful about less experience in coding when starting to study
@@MrTrollo2 agree
Drop that damn peer pressure!!
I finally found her again. Im so glad! Thankyou ETH Zurich. And dear brain, dont ever forget about ther okay? Shes the reason why im studying Math and Physics
What ETH Zurich and RTX 3080 have in common?
- You can watch about it on youtube.
- You can dream to reach.
And thats how far you gonna get if you are not %1.
edit: But hey you can still have intel integrated right :D
More of these videos please
I felt like you're describing my life right now. Hopefully I pass all the exams 🤞.
Living this life now. Feel horrible
I'm a 1st semester student too who just completed 1 month of college in Electronics Engineering a couple of days ago. My college is in my own country, just about 100km from my hometown and I'm currently studying online from the comforts of home due to COVID restrictions. But I can still totally relate to Selin! The studies do feel overburdening. I do feel overwhelmed and out of place sometimes, even though Electronics has been my childhood passion and I have chosen this field out of my own choice. It feels like I have grown up from a kid into an adult within a snap. However, all these feelings have so far had a positive impact on me. They are somehow making me more motivated and confident rather than depressed. And watching this video made me even more relived, that I'm not the only one going through all this.
So, if you are a 1st year student too who is feeling overwhelmed with college, I want you to know that you'll get through it. Just hold on!
I like listen to you talking, clear, really confident and thoughful. So much respect for you and hope to see you passing by someday at the ETH. Wish you much success and contentment in 2022.
even though people told me a cs degree is hard i couldn't comprehend how hard it actually was
After failing mathematics, physics, or mostly: electrical engineering, many students switch to computer science which is more fun.
@@goekhanbag the only problem is computer scienece is bascially a math degree for the first year
Thank you so much für sharing your experience. It really helps when being in the same situation!
idk why youtube recommended me this vidéo, but it's fcking great ! Good luck to her and really nice montage from the time ! (and nice song :)
Being a passout, from CS bachelor's, pretty much every one in their first year goes through, this stuff ... Because it's just a part of our life.
So relatable ❤
Excellent POV. Much needed ❤️
It may not be the healthiest thing, but when I feel like I'm out of place, I let that fuel my ego and everything seems to work out.
Sounds intresting, I bet i could use something like that. Could you make an Example what you would tell yourself in such a Situation?
Hmm how do you do that
She is beautiful.
yeah im in my first semester now and I feel like I accidentally signed up for a PhD in fucking math or some shit
i was architecture master student in ETH before and started CS this semester without any coding experience, FML
So is it possible for a bachelor student of mechanical engineering to enroll in a masters CS programme? And if it is possible what would the necessary pre requisites be?
@@flanker2724 I belive it is possible, maybe ask the Kanzlei?
just asking for a friend who wants to study CS after graduating from Architecture, what was your motivation?
Very nice video series.
Başarılar Selin
It took me 3 years to get past that point. Im six years in my chemistry bachelors, finishing it this semester, became a fitness instructor and finished a coding bootcamp, currently working as a junior developer :) Keep going, you will all make it.
She perfectly described how I feel
CS classes are the worst at this. You'll have people who have never coded before sitting next to people who have coded their whole lives, all because everyone has to take the same intro to programing courses.
She's a fun person
Even at my last semester I used to still struggle with coding.
Which college bro?
Good luck Selin
Can relate to this so much!
I have done master in computer science and its right smart people computer science.
Inspiring ✨✨
Looking for your love and support ❤
This video was in youtube recommendation. Thought ETH was Ethereum
Well this is great now show someone that was not able to keep up what kind of road will these people take if they have the same dreams?
Wherever I go to study,I think I am in the wrong place.
Lol i got a bachelors in engineering while working full time. GL lady! Glad she didnt go through what i went through because she would go bald like i did
U would go bald anyway lol, but working and study is really hard at least ur prob rich now
@@yuisimp3392 not rich but no debt and big bank account starting from 0
Tolles Video. Ist dies für Bachelor- oder Masterstudent?
Masters
@@सत्यसंवाहक masters in cs with no prior experience in coding is possible?
@@adarshjha1300 yes bro, it may be possible but chances are low, people with Math major or Electrical engineering backgroung sometimes choose CS as their masters
@@adarshjha1300 what are you currently studying
@@सत्यसंवाहक in 12th :)
Isvicre cok zor bir ulke, insallah basarili olursun. Iyi sanslar Selin.
Türkiyede başardiysa her yerde başarır
Nice video
im sick of it too
yani olması gerektiği gibi olmuş, alman lisesi sonrası almanyaya gitmek. abi çok tuhaf ya, sacma sapan bir ortaokul hayatı, sonra anadoluda bir lise.. çabala çabala çabala, eskiden ne yapayım benim payıma da bu düşmüş diyordum ama o kadar koymuyordu, simdi ne zaman desem icim 😣
maalesef fırsatlar hiçbir zaman adil olmadı, olmayacak da, olmasına da imkan yok zaten. sınırlarımızı zorlamaktan başka çare yok, nerede olursak olalım.
Bu bakış açısını sevmiyorum. Yani, evet herkes kendi koşulları içerisinde değerlendirilmeli. Bizim koşullarımız, önceden bize sorulsa tercih etmeyeceğimiz koşullar olabilir. Bu koşullar içerisinde olmayı biz istemedik ama bu koşullar içerisinde yaşamayı biz istiyoruz (yaşamaya devam ederek bunu yapıyoruz), istediğimiz zaman bunu sonlandırma imkanımız da var. Bu durumda karar vermemiz gereken bir durum var: Bunu sonlandıracak mıyız, yok sonlandırmayacak mıyız?
Eğer sonlandırmıyor, yaşamaya devam ediyorsak bu bakış açısından sıyrılıp sürekli mücadele etmek gerekiyor.
Tabi, yukarıda bahsettiğim kararı sadece bir kere vermiyoruz, yaşadığımız sürece birçok kez bu kararı gözden geçirmek gerekiyor.
Okay its good.But u need marks dude.U cannot apply anywhere if u have poor marks.After being selected, they will tell u its very easy to do.But no one will u, u have to work like hell to get there
Can I join cs without zero knowledge
Does Selin study CS at ETH in English or German?
it is probably german
The first year is officially in German but will contain a lot of English: most material will be English but the professor might speak German. You can pass the first year with basic German skills.
It трябва да го имаш вътре в себе си за да го научиш2022
Hi
Is quite hard
As soon as I heard she likes to read, play Gitarre, go out with friends, I knew she is the wrong person for computer science.
She isn't.
She just won't meld well with computer science, and she may change education path.
CS has a lot of toxicity, and at least in my experience they don't take studying seriously. It's basically full of kids who won't grow up, and do not want to put in any effort. They'll ride on whatever experience they have from before starting studies, try to be cocky, and then they fail as soon as new things are introduced. People who really want to be "a gifted child" but either just plain and simply aren't, or are very lazy, and want to find a subject that doesn't take too much effort while making him/her feel like they're "gifted".
TL;DR: CS is full of kids with superiority complexes, and it'll be difficult to blend in if you're a "normal" person.
@@muuubiee Very one sided view, for sure. I have no clue where you coming from and what you are actually trying to tell us.
I was referring to hard work that needs to be connected with CS, which should be true for any kind of subject. Though, To be a strong developer you have to have a hole bunch of background knowledge, which I believe requires additional effort.
in 0:20 which IDE she is using?
Android studio mate 😌
kinda looks like pycharm
Eclipse
Welcome to Computer Science, It is so hard independent your studying place. Maybe, If you study in Turkey It may more hard because you work also to stay at life against economy & unknown dangerouses at the same time. I hope so you will more succesfull and happy :))) ✨❇
Hey anna
Nobody said she is beautiful so I am going to say it
bc they ain't no simp who always comment she is beautiful to every stuff which has a pretty women include
@@sdeitym such a rarity to find. Simple beautiful girls.girls are working too hard to fit some standards of beauty.these simple natural one's are rare
Torpil
Sorry but she's stunningly pretty
Her english is really good for a Turk. I didn't know english proficiency was that high over there, maybe it's because she lives in switzerland, but i thought they spoke french and german in switzerland? (zurich is german, no?)
In india, we learn programming starting from 9th standard, atleast if you take the central board, so most students have atleast written some simple BASIC programs by college and i think it helps. I never felt pressurized in my engineering course, except that in the 1st year we do chemistry, physics and other subjects which i think is kind of pointless.
Why is taking some basic classes outside of your main focus "point less"? Are you that independent, as a human being, that you grow your own foods, build your own shelter, make your own shoes and clothes, do your own medical check-ups or surgeries when you're sick, etc?
We need to be able to relate to other human beings & what they do for humanity.....
We need to understand, to some good degrees, who biology, chemistry, business, agriculture, ecology, history, linguistics, etc work ... so regardless what specialty we are in, we able to relate to our fellow human beings whom WE DEPEND on, from hour to hour, day to day.
Try not eating --- for just 5 days --- the foods grown by some lowly farm workers and see how good you feel, when you're doing your engineering activities.
Wow, she is damn beautiful.... now I'm feeling that I'm in the wrong place. I should be her batchmate.
The unfair advantage
She's hot!
All the useful, honest content and all you could care about so that u have to write it down, is just something great about her appearance.
@@user-xv1gz8bd1d I Know...but sometimes in these serious discussions...there should be something fun..right...I mean I am complementing her...maybe it will put smile in her face...I used hot instead of beautiful...when someone says hot...They have overall good looking personality!I guess the term is overrated and been confused from a very long time as a slang..I am so not referring to that here...BTW she's hot!
@@danielchandra9985 I know you don't mean it bad, but as a female student i can tell you this, we don't see being described as "hot" as a compliment. With this you downgrade all her effort down to her appearance. You can say "pretty" but hot is sexual-sensitive, you imply something here :) This is my advice for you next time you talk to a female scholar directly/indirectly , because in reallife you don't hear that from them but some of them aren't really comfortable with this.
@@user-xv1gz8bd1d ohk....I got it!... She's pretty not hot...ok..got it.....You are a good person..and I know it's basic manner...so sorry for my childish funny behavior...
BTW at least smile now!!!!!!It was pretty long chat conversation...hahaha
@@danielchandra9985 no problem, thank you for understanding.
I love diversity quotas. so much justice
Anyone who meets the entry requirements is accepted to the ETH bachelor's degree. The selection process happens after the first year where around 40% fail the exams
Does anyone knows her instagram id or facebook or anything😅
chill out dude lmfao