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I am a Master's student of Computer Science.

If you guys had 4 months off,

  1. What new technology would you learn?
  2. Which computer science book would you read?
  3. What dream project would you make?

[edit: Im going on an internship/coop from jan-july 2010.]

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66% accept rate
This should be a CW – Ólafur Waage Apr 13 at 1:23
This is impossible to answer without some kind of context: what you know, what you'd like to learn and so on. – cletus Apr 13 at 1:24
Consider making this question community wiki, as it is way too general. – lothar Apr 13 at 1:26
I agree with Cletus, impossible to answer without context. I agree with the others as well: put this in the wiki – George Jempty Apr 13 at 1:27
Don't be afraid to do wiki, you can still earn badges. – Lucas McCoy Apr 13 at 1:31
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closed as not a real question by Steven A. Lowe, paxdiablo, Samuel, Rich B, Shog9 Apr 13 at 21:10

17 Answers

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Go somewhere, travel when u are young....

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learn LOLCODE

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I would find an internship. Skills you will learn at internship you cant learn by sitting in your room reading books or coding on your machine.

In my opinion "ITS THE INTERNSHIP"

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I would say that you should do everything that you can to find a job or internship, doesn't matter which.

No matter what you learn by yourself, if you don't have industrial experience with it, nobody is going to look at it. Which is very sad, but right now, the time for self idealistic learning is gone, and four months should be used to secure a career. Without more industrial experience when you graduate, your M.S. wouldn't count for much.

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I'm in a similar boat. I plan on:

  1. Learning Python or Ruby.
  2. Continue reading books from the Pragmatic Programmers series.
  3. Try out weight training and perhaps a photography class.
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Ruby is also at the top of my list right now. – kunjaan Apr 13 at 4:33
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Just found my old Hypercard manual. Probably reread that for lols. And I've been somewhat interested in learning more about LLVM. Probably the project I'd choose would be to make a HyperTalk compiler with LLVM as the back-end. My C++ is a bit rusty and could use a refresh.

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this is probably completely unhelpful, but its your summer vacation, treat it like a vacation, and find something you would have fun learning. if it is something that you would enjoy and you can get some use out of it later down the road so much the better. I graduated back in December with a BS of IT degree. and thanks to the job market i have had plenty of time to learn different things right now i am working on learning PHP MySQL and AJAX. While it may help me sometime down the road, the main reason i am learning it is because i really enjoy it.

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Broaden your horizons.

If you're young you probably want to learn more about programming, so do a personal project. Something you can show companies (and put on your resume) and peers.

If you're a little older, do something different: learn to play music, read, or share your experiences through a blog.

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  • learn to swim, or at least learn to sit on a beach and not look like a CS grad student
  • learn to dance with both feet.
  • learn to talk to non-technical people

(remember to wear pants)

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I personally have always found pants to be an impediment to fun. – Chris Lutz Apr 13 at 4:25
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  1. Either Ruby and Ruby On Rails, or linux commands. Such commands as 'screen' and even vim are things that I don't know but wish I had the time to fully figure out and memorize the keys for.
  2. Code Complete (2nd edition); it's been on my shelf, in all its huge glory, but ever since I bought it and read a few pages it was a great book but I just haven't found a lot of time to keep up my reading. If I could get myself to sit down and read it, I think I'd learn a lot about good programming practices.
  3. A simple online game. No, not a MMO, no massive to it; just some little test where you can log in and walk around. It's still a large ambition, but I think it's very doable in several months to at least have the ability to log in and walk around a terrain. Probably more than that, too; once you get that working, you can try implementing AI, or items, or a map editor, or really anything; online games have very distinct features so you can constantly add on new things to make the game more fun.
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Android Libraries

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If I was you, I would find a local code-shop that takes summer interns and go and get some commercial experience. Nothing is better on a résumé than solid, real-life experience. You can learn about shiny new technologies in class next year.

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thanks for the suggestion. I understand the importance of internships. I am going on a coop after next semester probably starting around jan. – kunjaan Apr 13 at 4:39
Sounds good! In that case I'd be looking to spend some time outside, enjoying the fresh air - climb a mountain, go sailing, travel for a while. Unless you are extremely fortunate, there are not many times in your life when you have four months of free time and are capable of making the most if it! – ninesided Apr 13 at 4:56
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Based on your education level, your answers might be different than mine.

  1. Learn Scala
  2. Read Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
  3. Finally build a Difference Engine
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4 months hmm..do what I could not do..learn iphone API and implement the next great tool that will make you a million dollars.

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+1 a much more practical suggestion than yet another programming language or musty book ;-) – Steven A. Lowe Apr 13 at 1:56
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  1. Python and Django
  2. Mythical Man Month
  3. Something that uses a very very large database, since I would like more experience in that area.
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Yes, the Mythical Man-Month, great book! – Ricket Apr 13 at 1:47
I loved the book. theres a reason dude won the turing award : ) – kunjaan Apr 13 at 4:37
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How would we know what you dream of or what technology makes your mouth water. Go and do something you will enjoy! Having fun is a guarantee that you will learn something. If you need Ideas, check out the projects that mentor Google summer of code.

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This is the only right answer to this question – Click Upvote Apr 13 at 1:53
I was not expecting a general answer. Sorry. Of course, ultimately I may do what I personally love to do and not just the suggestion thats received the highest upvotes. Just wanted to see what the community would do if they were in my place. – kunjaan Apr 13 at 4:37
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I would build that website I've been planning for the last year and a half. (Ruby on Rails, social networking, user interfaces)

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A social networking site... how original. Do you plan on also building a blogging engine? – cletus Apr 13 at 1:26
cletus: reinventing the wheel is actually a great learning experience. many people when starting out with a web language such as php make a cms and move on from there. i think a social networking site would be a good learning experience. – Ricket Apr 13 at 1:45
@Ricket: it's just so cliched. – cletus Apr 13 at 1:49
It may be cliche but at least I'll have a project to work on. Beats reading blogs and stackoverflow instead of actually programming. – epochwolf Apr 13 at 2:30

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