Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Final Blog Post - Andrew Paladino

For this week in AE-510, the final week of all of the weeks of the winter term, the week of weeks, the post of posts, on the day of days, the night of nights, the afternoon of afternoons, in the most dire hour of dire hours, in the fleeting minutes of every minute to ever fleet, in this armada of seconds in the fleets of minutes, in this very moment, the final moment in which I will be assigned a blog post in this final week of AE-510, students were asked to reflect on the class and what they learned, and in the moment of moments in which I read this assignment, during the most pressing of times, I seriously considered whether or not my brief, short, transient presence in the class so called AE-510: Intelligent buildings, was worthwhile or not, valuable or not, invaluable or not, during which time I stopped to think about what worthwhileness, valueness, and invaluableness really was, and wherein if by knowing these deep, philosophical, physical, metaphysical, ethical subject matters or not qualified me to comment intelligently on this intelligent class of intelligent buildings, after all, a leopard cannot change its stripes, and who can intelligently comment on how the cow ate the cabbage; thereby, in such aforementioned instances when asked to reflect, consider, contemplate,  meditate, ponder, I must not let myself be thrown for a loop, and realize what this course pounded into my brain, what this whole ball of wax really meant, and how if a bird in the hand is a man in the sand, what does intelligent buildings entail in retrospect and remembrance in the grand scheme of my life beyond the week of weeks, the post of posts, on the day of days, the night of nights, the afternoon of afternoons, in the most dire hour of dire hours, in the fleeting minutes of every minute to ever fleet, in this armada of seconds in the fleets of minutes, in this very moment, the final moment in which I will be assigned a blog post in this final week of AE-510, in my honest opinion, think, with all intended usage of assonance and alliteration, that the class was sincerely all of the positive aforementioned adjectives that project positivity and in one final colloquial statement I’d like to say


Comments:

Steve - How does one even begin to consider the amount of pancakes it takes to shingle a roof? You didn't keep in mind that if a canoe is going upstream it has no wheels. Great post, keep up the good work. Maybe next time don't be such a jerk. 


Phil - In this course, in this course, in this course, in this course, in this course, in this course, well done, and by the way, don't forget to always, under any circumstances, 

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