I thought opera, opera and opera during the whole place is just kind of a sense of all really you get. It's quite unlike any other university has been to and I thought at that point that I may as well try and apply to do the course, the interest in the whole teaching system, the tutorials, the kind of student, the amount of contact time that you get in groups of, of like two or three with the tutor. It's quite unlike in any other university, I guess.
The group products are great for the students being able to work in a group, especially with people you've never actually worked with before, which is something that happens in the real world and in the companies in real jobs. So they actually get to participate in some really cool projects. Although I've definitely enjoyed it, it was nice to be able to do stuff that wasn't just coding.
So threading around, working in a team, putting together presentations, thinking about how to sell the project. I chose to do a project with Bank of America because I thought would be good experience working with a big institution on solving a real world problem. Whereas in the past, I've always worked on my own and it's been a good introspection to see how the different pressures arise for work. Liberal people. Well, I didn't ever really consider any other course of the computer science.
I have been playing around with computers since I was really young. So when I sold the course in computer science, I thought, That's it. I always wanted to go to a good university, and I felt there was nothing to lose in applying to Oxford. So I picked that as my first choice, and they never said that.
