Computational Complexity

 

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Friday, March 18, 2005

 
The End of the Travel Season

Posted by Lance

In 2005 I have already traveled on five trips to four different countries on three different continents. My travel comes in bunches. I didn't teach in the winter quarter (at the cost of doubling up in the spring) so I planned much of my travel during this time. After I return tomorrow I have no major trips planned until STOC in late May.

Why do I travel? I don't enjoy at all the act of traveling despite the advantage of non-stop flights to nearly everywhere from Chicago. The tourism bit has long lost its allure. After a while all the cities and universities start to look the same.

I don't need to travel. I could hole up in Chicago, just work with the students and visitors and have a moderate research career. I have tenure so my job is safe in any case. So why travel?

  1. People: Working with people, talking with people, drinking with people. Traveling to visit different people keeps my research and academic life from getting stale.
  2. Getting Away: Like most people, I have considerable work and family responsibilities and travel allows me to escape and have time to focus on research. When I visit someone for a short time they will usually make time to work with me as well. The internet has prevented me from completely escaping but I can usually tell people I'm away and I will deal with the problem when I get back. I do try to keep to a goal of not leaving the family for more than a week at a time.
  3. Being Involved: If you want to be an active member of the community people need to know who you are. Don't travel and people will forget you. Email is not a good substitute for meeting face to face.
Traveling has many virtues but I am really looking forward to two straight months of going no where at all.

3:23 AM #

  1. Blogger scerir says:  
    Coelum, non animum mutant, qui trans mare currunt. Strenua nos exercet inertia, navibus atque quadrigis petimus bene vivere; quod petis hic est, ...
    -Quintus Horatius Flaccus

    They change their sky, not their mind, who cross the sea.
    A busy idleness possesses us,
    we seek a happy life, with ships and carriages; the object of our search is present with us, ...

  2. Anonymous Anonymous says:  
    Ummm, speaking of traveling, what happened to the blog entry that used to be following this one, about a prospective grad student traveling through the dark underbelly of theory departments in North America?

  3. Anonymous Anonymous says:  
    There was another entry?

    Dang, missed it.

    Maybe the student requested to have it removed. In any case this is about the time prospective grad students are visiting colleges and I see that some of them have recorded their impressions on their blogs.

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