 Alright guys, before the video gets started, I was literally just about to upload it, but I realized I have one very special announcement for today. As many of you know, one of the groups I've been involved in on campus is Camp Kessum. It's one, honestly, probably one of the most important things. And kind of one of the things that has defined my Yale experience. I was a counselor at Camp Kessum this past August. It was just absolutely incredible. For those of you that don't know, Camp Kessum is an organization that puts on free week-long summer camps for kids who have parents that have been affected by cancer. I mean, you have kids coming to this camp whose parents are going through treatment, you have kids that have lost their parents, and this camp really means a lot to them. Having a parent with cancer really makes you grow up fast, and this camp is a place where they can meet other kids who have gone through similar experiences. So why does this matter? Well, today is Giving Tuesday, which is the biggest fundraising day of the year for Camp Kessum. Obviously, these summer camps are free, and we have to have some way to pay for them. So it's my job as a counselor to raise money throughout the year so we can sit in kids at camp. So today I have pledged to raise $500, and I need your guys' help. If I do end up hitting my $500 goal by the end of the day, I have accepted to dare to eat an entire ghost pepper, post the video to this YouTube channel for you guys to see all my suffering and tears. So get hyped for that. So whether you want to see me suffer, whether you love me, whether you love kids, whether you just hate cancer, I strongly recommend donating even just a couple dollars. It would mean the world to these kids that, I mean, Camp Kessum is just something that they can look forward to every summer, and they're just going through so much. So what I'll do is I'll leave my link below. Anything helps. Literally anything. And I hope you guys enjoy the video. Thank you for supporting me. Thank you. I hope you'll support Camp Kessum because it's just a great cause. So with that, roll the beat. I'm wondering, Josh, why haven't you been filming? Well, it happens to be a very stressful time here at Yale. I mean, most of the time here at Yale is pretty stressful, but especially this past week, which is kind of the first week when midterms begin to start, which is kind of scary to thank that I'm already six or seven weeks into the semester and feels like I just got here. But now I'm cramming for midterms. I actually had three and then a project this week. Two of them are done. The project's done. I just have one more. And yeah, it's been quite a week. It's been quite a grind. So I'll explain to you guys a little bit, lay you down what the grind's been like because it has been quite stressful. My first midterm was this past Monday. By the way, today is Saturday, and that was in Electrical Engineering 202 or Communication Computation and Control. In other words, all of that stuff. So this Electrical Engineering class has actually been pretty cool so far. We've done a lot of work with code words information theory, mainly, which is just a really cool concept and something that I've never really gotten to explore before. Basically answering the questions. We have some information. We need to get it from one place to another through a channel. That channel may mess up the information. We don't even know. So how do we most efficiently code this information? We put each symbol into a code word, transferring it from one place to another so that it gets to the other side and it gets to the other side where the code errors can be detected or even corrected. So it's just some really cool stuff. The midterm was a beast. It was three hours long. We made it through and I feel like it was definitely difficult, but it went okay. Today afternoon was CS. Obviously, I'm a CS major, so this class has been pretty interesting so far. It's just Yale's basic data structure class. It's a lot of fun. It's Totten C though, which is a little annoying, but I think I'm finally beginning to at least accept the fact that I'm just going to have to use pointers and memory allocation and deal with memory leaks and all that stuff more consistently and I'm just, I'm getting better at it. I wish it wasn't Totten C, but I can't change that. It's making me a better programmer. It's making me think about things that other languages wouldn't. So that's been good. The midterm was on Thursday. It went pretty well. I'd say definitely some questions out of left field, but luckily I had studied pretty hard so I was able to answer some of those. Friday I had to present my midterm design project in architecture, which was very, very time-consuming. So we're given a specific set of materials. I think it was 10 opaque rectangles that had to be to scale and then five columns and a pediment or something and we had to just design a building, design a space using these materials and we could only cut them in half once and it had to be to scale or whatever. So I came up with this little structure over here. The goal is to assign a function to the building. So I guess this function is some sort of log cabin type of thing. The paint job really did not turn out very well. I built the whole thing in foam core and it looked great, but I wanted to cover up some of the rough edges and everything so I'm like, you know, I'm gonna paint it. And as soon as I started painting it, I immediately regretted everything I did because now it just literally looks like a pile of, yeah, you know what? But anyways, I feel like the design part of it was at least good enough. And so presented that yesterday. And now I just have one midterm left and that is CS202, which is discreet math. And speaking of that, I have to go eat food and head over to my favorite study spot because I'm gonna be grinding on that for the rest of the day, so let's go. Good morning, Kingry. How are we doing? I'm doing pretty great. I'm reading Death of a Salesman for my, actually my Japanese culture class so that I can then write Death of a Salary Man. Here we go. Zero originality. Do you want to explain the study spot, why there's so much elevated peanut butter? Well, the peanut butter is because, as you can probably tell, I've lost a lot of weight, but I still enjoy food. And you can't eat food and also lose weight. And I found that the only thing that I can eat that's sweet is peanut butter. So I just stock up on a lot of peanut butter at the beginning of the month and then slowly eat my way through it throughout the month. There we go. So I don't tend to blow my diet. Good stuff. So that's how I remain skinny Kingry, brunch. TD brunch is one of my favorite things in the world, especially on Saturday morning. Brunch keeps me going. You don't feel like you have to do any work until brunch at the end. Yeah. All right. Let's go.