Comment On A Rather Interesting Specialization

Kendall's friend was awarded this Bachelor of Landscape Architecture with a rather interesting specialization from Polytech. [expand full text]
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Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 08:02 • by ParkinT
Bachelor of Landscape Architecture?
With a Minor in Spreading Bullsh*t. Perfect for the world of IT Consulting.


Adds more credability to the old joke about the meaning of PhD.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 08:04 • by StarLite
The wooden tabletop is part of the actual degree probably :P

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 08:05 • by CrazyBomber
"Gordon Freeman, it IS you!"

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 08:15 • by Azeem Jiva (unregistered)
Hey that's where I got my undergrad as well!

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 08:29 • by Patryk Zawadzki
For great justice ....

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 08:53 • by Stiggy (unregistered)
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Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 08:55 • by halber_mensch
You requested a license key to be updated.
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I postulate that Schroedinger's cat wrote (and did not write) this webapp.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 08:57 • by Claxon
The real WTF is ...

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 09:08 • by Nazca
Hmmm, a "Bachelor of Landscape Architecture in Computer Science"

It springs to mind that this guy has a promising career in one of two fields:

1/ Adding natural scenery (trees, bushes, etc) to 3d environments such as games.
2/ Growing a server farm.

Personally, I find both to sound fun :P

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 09:16 • by rawsteak
Big Brother is watching you watching US!

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 09:20 • by Keith (unregistered)
I knew Second Life was becoming quite big these days, but big enough to have specialised degrees?

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 09:29 • by T_PAAMAYIM_NEKUDOTAYIM
And the Oscar goes to...

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 09:55 • by Koesper
I wonder if those degrees also come in Portrait...

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 10:02 • by dkf (unregistered)
About 87 hours battery life? Wow! I want one! (I might even put up with Vista.... Hah! Just kidding. No Vista.)

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 10:20 • by whatzhisface (unregistered)
I am sure the degree was just a cut and paste error. Your sitting there, typing degree's all day long. Who wouldn't take a short cut now and then?

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 10:26 • by elias
176888 in reply to 176887
whatzhisface:
I am sure the degree was just a cut and paste error. Your sitting there, typing degree's all day long. Who wouldn't take a short cut now and then?

I would think "Bachelor of Science" or "Bachelor of Arts" would already be a part of the template...

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 10:33 • by AndStuff (unregistered)
176891 in reply to 176844
Claxon:
The real WTF is ...

VB of course.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 10:43 • by N (unregistered)
Looks like someone took the concept of not giving useful information to the client/potential attacker too far.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 10:56 • by Someone You Know
Ahhh, Websense...

I work on a WebSphere Portal development team. Portal's URLs generally contain a lot of navigational state information. To the untrained eye (e.g., our content-filtering software) this is nothing more than a bunch of random characters.

Occasionally, that "random" text will happen to include some word that trips the content filter. I have, for instance, been denied access to Portal's administration pages because they contain pornography.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 11:05 • by Whitey (unregistered)

Landscape Architecture in Computer Science? This guy made it work: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Dangermond

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 11:15 • by mauhiz (unregistered)
That unfinished message reminds me of ...

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 11:16 • by Johnathan (unregistered)
While not completely in vein with the first pic, it did remind me of something. Before I could get my soul crushed at a job, the diploma office went ahead and did it for me.

I liked to pretend that the creation of my diploma was a meticulous process. Care was taken to make sure everything was right. A thousand Valkyries came down Valhalla to hand the sacred paper cut made from a branch of Yggdrasil The president, careful to not soil the good name representing on this ticket, used his specialized diploma ink specifically for his name. Hurrahs were raised and explosions were made in the honor of this sole diploma. And the process would repeat. Forever. Life would be grand!

So when I realized they misspelled my name on the diploma, spelling it "Jonathan" rather than "Johnathan" (A mistake that happens all the damn time), I was almost mortified. What would I do? Surely this would take weeks to mend! Nevertheless, I calmed myself and started the process over.

A day later, I went to the diploma office and told them the error of her ways. An older lady, popping her gum, looked at it briefly and said "One sec." She grabbed a piece of paper from a stack of a familiar shade. "Oh no, she's not going to-- Is she?"

On an older HP Laserjet Printer in the middle of the basement office, my diploma was remade in its correct form. I didn't say anything for a minute. Distraught, I simply took my new diploma with a polite "Thank you" and hastily left the room. I even got to keep the typo copy. Still, the illusion, however thin it was, had been ruined forever.

It only occurred to me later that I should have asked for five or six more copies for people by the name of "Simon Belmont" and "Gordon Freeman". I wonder if I go back and do that now...

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 12:07 • by WRP (unregistered)
Too bad he's not an Associate of Landscape Architecture in Computer Science. That'd be, backwards, S.C.A.L.A.

Yes, I'm a nerd.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 12:18 • by Architecture is my major (unregistered)
Well, I can understand somewhat how this happened.

Cal Poly, and a few other schools, offer 3 Bachelors programs. The usual Bachelors of Arts (B.A.), Bachelors of Science (B.S.) and a third, Bachelors of Architecture (B.Arch.). B.Arch. is reserved for accredited architecture degree programs (for licensing purposes) and only students of Architecture should be receiving it.

At Cal Poly, the Landscape Architecture program is part of the same department as Architecture, but still, someone screwed the pooch on this one.

*disclaimer: I have a Bachelors of Architecture in Architecture.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 12:42 • by operagost
Chris Gocong minored in QB sacks at Cal Poly. I would like to see that on a diploma.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 13:44 • by duh (unregistered)
176949 in reply to 176853
Landscape Architecture in the computer science world is what you refer to the layout of your dev -> testing -> qa -> prod environments and how you migrate changes throughout the entire "landscape".

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 13:48 • by duh (unregistered)
176951 in reply to 176949
http://www.sap-img.com/general/what-is-sap--landscape.htm

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 14:00 • by alex (unregistered)
bachelor of...

i think more of the hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy and building supercomputers like earth ;-)

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 14:12 • by whatzhisface (unregistered)
176958 in reply to 176888
When did Computer Science get added to the template?

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 14:58 • by spork 2000 (unregistered)
Obviously, when ....

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 15:08 • by thoughtful (unregistered)
Interesting security . . . two character state blacked out. So let's start with the biggest and work our way down, shall we?

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 15:08 • by Walleye (unregistered)
We can neither confirm nor deny that your request has been completed.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 15:24 • by thrax (unregistered)
Someone has to decide where to plant the b-trees.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 16:21 • by Berislav (unregistered)
Landscape architecture in IT is a very important specialty, and has to be distinguished from the portrait architecture.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 16:28 • by Travis Reitter (unregistered)
The mix-up with the degree is probably due to Cal Poly's department abbreviations:

CS -> Crop Science
CSC -> Computer Science

At most universities, "CS" means "computer science", but crop science has been around at Cal Poly much longer, so it still holds onto "CS".

Somebody probably just mixed the two up when generating the degrees.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 17:06 • by Richard P. (unregistered)
Its CalPoly not PolyTech.

Also, while the above poster might be right about the reasoning behind Computer Science being CSC instead of CS, he is wrong about the reason. Crop Science is in the College of Agriculture, not the College of Architecture and Environmental Design.

And at CalPoly, Computer Science (CSC) is in the College of Engineering.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 20:49 • by orion (unregistered)
177015 in reply to 176968
thoughtful:
Interesting security . . . two character state blacked out. So let's start with the biggest and work our way down, shall we?

NY

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-14 22:18 • by andreyvul
177021 in reply to 176853
Nazca:

Growing a server farm.

Will the cattle run Linux?

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-15 01:40 • by Dave (unregistered)
177025 in reply to 176826
ParkinT:
Bachelor of Landscape Architecture?
With a Minor in Spreading Bullsh*t. Perfect for the world of IT Consulting.

Adds more credability to the old joke about the meaning of PhD.


At the PhD level the B.LA becomes a Doctorate in Cruel and Unusual Geography, so it doesn't quite apply any more.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-15 02:42 • by Aniko (unregistered)
I would like to say that...

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-15 13:30 • by Steve (unregistered)
I went to Cow Patty . . . er, I mean Cal Poly. Doesn't surprise me in the slightest.

Do they still give degrees in Onrymental Hornyculture there?

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-15 16:00 • by jayh (unregistered)
"the websense category government is filtered"

I certainly explains a lot that government employees are blocked from reading about government.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-15 18:16 • by Bah (unregistered)
Anybody care to take a shot at what that URL is? I'll give you an average of 25 guesses...

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-16 00:57 • by Jb (unregistered)
You know, during those two summers I spent doing landscaping, I regularly wished I was programming instead. I never dreamt that I could keep doing landscaping AND do programming.

It conjures images of using a laptop while digging with a backhoe. I suppose it could be fun until you have to address the lost of life and property that results....

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-16 01:56 • by Bryan Price (unregistered)
We have to mark out the website? We've got 50 chances to hit, and I see that I've already struck oil with NY.

Although evidently now the states are free to use stuff like ohio.gov instead of state.oh.us. That wasn't true 7 years ago when I was in the state system. We had ohio.gov grandfathered in, but the lonely little departments were banished to state.oh.us.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-16 16:40 • by Websense Hater (unregistered)
WebSense is such crap, and it is down to the lack of quality of their blocklists.

You can visit theDailyWTF, but not see images in articles (e.g. screenshots etc) because they come from a server beginning with "img.". They deem those to be like Flickr or something I guess.

They block any blogs at blogspot or typepad as 'social or personal sites' even if they are programming/tech blogs.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-18 13:21 • by BJ Upton (unregistered)
177639 in reply to 177021
andreyvul:
Nazca:

Growing a server farm.

Will the cattle run Linux?


Yes, Moo-buntu...


Sadly, this is old and my pun will die alone

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-02-18 15:35 • by Betsy Schwartz (unregistered)
177662 in reply to 176853
Although I assume this particular sheet of paper was a mistake, Landscape Architecture these days can be very computer-intensive and it's certainly possible to combine the two (although more often at the graduate level). Landscape Architecture today involves Geographic Information Systems and Spatial Decision Support Systems, Computer Aided Design, Mapping, modeling of both individual structures and complex systems.... and yes, developing landscapes for the gaming and film industries...

Betsy (Harvard Graduate School of Design Unix Sysadmin)

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-03-02 14:56 • by anonymous (unregistered)
Hmm, "commerce.health.state.ny.us" has a website. "commerce.health.state.de.us" is only for email. None of the others exist.

Re: A Rather Interesting Specialization

2008-03-03 21:10 • by Meredith (unregistered)
180934 in reply to 176853
You don't think it means he's an expert with Punch! Home Design software?
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