Deliver a Presentation like Steve Jobs

Our group were discussing about how we should present our project. Apple is famous for presenting and introducing their new products. Especially when Steve Jobs was on the stage, he attracted the press’ attention. There are ten brief points about how Jobs delivered a presentation in 2008 when he introduced the new Macbook Air.

1. Set the theme. ”There is something in the air today.” With those words, Jobs opened Macworld. By doing so, he set the theme for his presentation (BusinessWeek.com, 1/15/08) and hinted at the key product announcement—the ultrathin MacBook Air laptop. Every presentation needs a theme, but you don’t have to deliver it at the start. Last year, Jobs delivered the theme about 20 minutes into his presentation: “Today Apple reinvents the phone.” Once you identify your theme, make sure you deliver it several times throughout your presentation.

2. Demonstrate enthusiasm. Jobs shows his passion for computer design. During his presentation he used words like “extraordinary,” “amazing,” and “cool.” When demonstrating a new location feature for the iPhone, Jobs said, “It works pretty doggone well.” Most speakers have room to add some flair to their presentations. Remember, your audience wants to be wowed, not put to sleep. Next time you’re crafting or delivering a presentation, think about injecting your own personality into it. If you think a particular feature of your product is “awesome,” say it. Most speakers get into presentation mode and feel as though they have to strip the talk of any fun. If you are not enthusiastic about your own products or services, how do you expect your audience to be?

3. Provide an outline. Jobs outlined the presentation by saying, “There are four things I want to talk about today. So let’s get started…” Jobs followed his outline by verbally opening and closing each of the four sections and making clear transitions in between. For example, after revealing several new iPhone features, he said, “The iPhone is not standing still. We keep making it better and better and better. That was the second thing I wanted to talk about today. No. 3 is about iTunes.” Make lists and provide your audience with guideposts along the way.

4. Make numbers meaningful. When Jobs announced that Apple had sold 4 million iPhones to date, he didn’t simply leave the number out of context. Instead, he put it in perspective by adding, “That’s 20,000 iPhones every day, on average.” Jobs went on to say, “What does that mean to the overall market?” Jobs detailed the breakdown of the U.S smartphone market and Apple’s share of it to demonstrate just how impressive the number actually is. Jobs also pointed out that Apple’s market share equals the share of its top three competitors combined. Numbers don’t mean much unless they are placed in context. Connect the dots for your listeners.

5. Try for an unforgettable moment. This is the moment in your presentation that everyone will be talking about. Every Steve Jobs presentation builds up to one big scene. In this year’s Macworld keynote, it was the announcement of MacBook Air.

To demonstrate just how thin it is, Jobs said it would fit in an envelope. Jobs drew cheers by opening a manila interoffice envelope and holding the laptop for everyone to see. What is the one memorable moment of your presentation? Identify it ahead of time and build up to it.

6. Create visual slides. While most speakers fill their slides with data, text, and charts, Jobs does the opposite. There is very little text on a Steve Jobs slide. Most of the slides simply show one image. For example, his phrase “The first thing I want to talk to you about today…” was accompanied by a slide with the numeral 1. That’s it. Just the number. When Jobs discussed a specific product like the iPhone, the audience saw a slide with an image of the product. When text was introduced, it was often revealed as short sentences (three or four words) to the right of the image. Sometimes, there were no images at all on the slide but a sentence that Jobs had delivered such as “There is something in the air.” There is a trend in public speaking to paint a picture for audiences by creating more visual graphics. Inspiring presenters are short on bullet points and big on graphics.

7. Give ‘em a show. A Jobs presentation has ebbs and flows, themes and transitions. Since he’s giving his audience a show instead of simply delivering information, Jobs includes video clips, demonstrations, and guests he shares the stage with. In his latest keynote, the audience heard from Jim Gianopulos, CEO and chairman of Fox Filmed Entertainment, and Paul Otellini, CEO of Intel ((INTC). Enhance your presentations by incorporating multimedia, product demonstrations, or giving others the chance to say a few words.

8. Don’t sweat the small stuff. Despite your best preparation, something might go wrong as it did during the keynote. Jobs was about to show some photographs from a live Web site, and the screen went black while Jobs waited for the image to appear. It never did. Jobs smiled and said, “Well, I guess Flickr isn’t serving up the photos today.” He then recapped the new features he had just introduced. That’s it. It was no big deal. I have seen presenters get flustered over minor glitches. Don’t sweat minor mishaps. Have fun. Few will remember a glitch unless you call attention to it.

9. Sell the benefit. While most presenters promote product features, Jobs sells benefits. When introducing iTunes movie rentals, Jobs said, “We think there is a better way to deliver movie content to our customers.” Jobs explained the benefit by saying, “We’ve never offered a rental model in music because people want to own their music. You listen to your favorite song thousands of times in your life. But most of us watch movies once, maybe a few times. And renting is a great way to do it. It’s less expensive, doesn’t take up space on our hard drive…” Your listeners are always asking themselves, “What’s in it for me?” Answer the question. Don’t make them guess. Clearly state the benefit of every service, feature, or product.

10. Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse. Steve Jobs cannot pull off an intricate presentation with video clips, demonstrations, and outside speakers without hours of rehearsal. I have spoken to people within Apple who tell me that Jobs rehearses the entire presentation aloud for many hours. Nothing is taken for granted. You can see he rehearsed the Macworld presentation because his words were often perfectly synchronized with the images and text on the slides. When Jobs was showing examples of the films that are available on the new iTunes movie rental service, one poster of a particular film appeared at the exact moment he began to talk about it. The entire presentation was coordinated. A Steve Jobs presentation looks effortless because it is well-rehearsed.

From:http://www.businessweek.com/smallbiz/content/jan2008/sb20080125_269732_page_2.htm


The Rough Draft of Script

This is our first script of the group project. It is still draft and we need to make the thesis statement radical. Also, the second part of the speech about letter vs. email is lack of material. Things repeat again and again. And we need a conclusion too. The conclusion should be a wrap up and make people think. I will change them tomorrow night. Anyway, it takes a long time for me to write. Enjoy!!!

Today I’m gonna talk about a technology. It’s better than your brand new iphone, your super computer and any kind of state-of-art technology we have admired.

Before I start, let me first ask you some questions. What would you do if I tell you to send a message to your friend now? Text a message by phone, right? But what would people do two hundred years ago? Of course, write letters. Imagine you were an American running business in Shanghai and you wanted to contact with your family in NY. It would take probably a few months for a letter to get to NY and another several months to get back. Nowadays, how long does it take to tell my mom, who lives in Shanghai,  to send me more money through skype? Less than a second! After clicking the “send” button, I will find my mom pissed off on the other side of the earth immediately! (Laugh)

Here’s another thing. Do you understand a term called “mitosis” ? if you dont, and you have a iPhone 4s, you can pull it up and ask Siri. But what do you think people would do back then there was no Internet? How about burying themselves in the library and screening through thousands of books? plus, there was no library searching book assistance at that time.

So modern technologies have made our lives much more convenient and comfortable than before. but there is one big question. do you feel comfortable checking your smart phone every second to see your friend’s face book status? or do you feel comfortable waiting in front of computer till your friend get online and you can chat a little bit? lets have some numbers again. How many people in here have smart phones? how often do you use face book? Amazing? I am little concern about this issue and this is what I want to talk about today. Today, I want to say human body is the best technology. It is the Human Body that can really make our lives better.

Do you ever has the experience when you are talking with your friend on skype, and you are mad because they say something you don’t like. You reply and try to stop him, but he does not understand the meaning and make you more mad. You do right? Technology can deliver and receive information very fast. But what it lacks of is to deliver emotion. Computers, smart phones, iPads, they are machines. They can not think, they can not be happy. They cannot deliver something picture and word cannot describe, in this case it is emotion. And it is the reason that face book and skype currently can send face symbols in conversation. Moreover, more communication companies update their applications so that customers can video chat with their friends; in fact, face book just started their video chat service this year. Why do they want this? Why cant we just have a simple application for only texts and pictures transferring? Because technology does not deliver emotion.

Human body can solve this problem. I have an idea. and I called it “emotion text”. We all know that the neurons in our bodies can receive orders from our brains and send orders to action neurons so that we can move or jump or laugh or run. And we also know that neurons transfer information by the increasing and decreasing of electrons. We know that sometimes in order to send the order fast, neurons can jump and skip over some neurons to arrive at the destination. This all inner body transformation. and it is fascinating. it is fascinating that a baseball player can discriminate a 90mph fastball and a 76mph curve ball. And it is even fascinating that from the pitcher hill to the batter, the 90 mph fastball takes only 0.416 second and some athletes can react and hit home runs.

What about neurons to neurons inter human body transferring? do you get what I meant? What if we are able to talk and send messages to each other by a certain electric wavelength so that the neurons in my body can communicate to your neurons. If that is possible, then we can send text, chart we’ve seen on textbooks, equations and functions we learned in calculus class, some funny pictures we want to share all through our neurons. But where do we store the information? a smart phone has a hard ware. 16GB, 32GB, or if you want to pay extra 200 dollars for a new iPhone 4s 64GB. It turns out in nature the human bodies have the best hardware no technologist and scientist can ever make. It is our brains. the brain. The brain never eats storage. The brain never need fire ware. The brain never needs an application called spotlight to look for some files. And from scientific research, a human only consume 10% of the storage of brain in his entire life. How about save those information in our brain! You dont have to worry about losing them anymore. This is brilliant right? this is our bodies ability. I have more to tell you. We learn from science that when we are happy or sad, our brainwave have different wavelengths. How about transferring the wavelength through our neurons to other human bodies. So you can tell your parents that “uh, i think I fail my calc test, (with a sad face).” And you have to be very sad so that your parents wont talk about you can work harder. What if, what if. you want to tell your friend that you have a great night in a party. Does a text “I have a great night” enough? Or you can transfer your emotion to your friend by “I have a good night (with a happy face)” This is my idea about emotion text.

Next I want to talk about an old way to send people information or update. It is way before email, text, and walkie talkie. Let me ask you: how many people have written a letter in this month?  I bet there are less people who write letters than ones who send emails. This is an obvious example to represent the difference between technology and human. Let’s ask theladies in this room. Would you rather receive an letter from your boyfriend or husband about love or an email? a hand written letter represent effort, earnest, and enthusiasm. And from scientific research, people tend to read the letter longer than to read the same length email. People tend to screen through emails and look for important information while, when people read letters, they read the details and remember the words and sentences. Why?

It turns out that when people read the hand writing, it feels like the actual people is talking to you. And when you read it, you will subconsciously read the letter with the person who writes the letter’s voice. But when you read an email, you read it with your own voice. and it does not matter who write the letter to you, it only matters what it is about. In contrast, when a person send you a letter, it really matters who writes to you.

A person’s writing also reminds you how he looks like. There are a lot of causes that make the handwriting personal. A person’s handwriting not only represent his characteristic, in law, it represents authority and authentication. In a word, a hand written letter represent himself and it is also made of the best technology in the world, the human.


Humanity and Empathy

My volunteer work last summer was very limited, but it still gave me a sense of great satisfaction and deepened my appreciation for the opportunity to study in the U.S. Last summer, an unprecedented amount of rain from typhoon Morakot struck the mountainous area of southern Taiwan. My father and I walked on foot into the disaster area to deliver needs and to cheer up the refugees.

We walked into the mountains carrying relief supplies. The muddy rivers, once beautiful, carried down rocks and enormous amount of water. The only bridge connecting the mountain and the city was crushed by the giant flow of water. Hills that used to be filled with flower blossoms and birds singing were completely covered by mud, and structures that once stood tall were destroyed by strong wind or swept away by the mud slides. Walking along the rough path, I saw some small animals buried under crumbled trees. After an hour walk, we finally arrived at the refugee center.

Many of the inhabitants were crowded in temporary housing and overwhelmed with loss and grief. Survivors waited for news of missing family members, searched for items in the ruined homes, and worried about their devastated farmlands. Through the long night that my father and I spent with the refugees, we tried to console them and to comfort them. On the piano inside a church, I played “Symphony No. 9” (by Beethoven, a final piece of him which has another name, Ode to Joy) for them, hoping to lift their spirit and create a better mood for them to face the difficulties that lay ahead. Despite my limited ability to alleviate their pain, I did see some smiles among the children. After dinner, while we gathered with the villagers in a big circle to share stories, an old man told us his own experience.

This old farmer began his story by encouraging his neighbors to be stronger and braver. He told us that he was a farmer in the deep mountain. His farmland and his house were swept away in the typhoon, and his family—a wife and a young son—with it. All he had left were the memories of the final moment before his wife and son were separated from him by the mud slide that came from above. For days, he thought he had no reason to live in this world and was so desperate that he almost committed suicide.  However, he did not forgo any chance to save his family members and thus begged the rescue teams to scrutinize fully if there were any sign of life in the area where his wife and son disappeared. He waited for a whole week, but the rescue team brought no news. One night, the volunteers came and pulled him from the dark corner of the refugee house and pushed him up aboard a helicopter. The flight was heading to the hospital—to see his wife and son. He ended this story with tears running down his cheeks. Sharing the thrill of that moment when the family was reunited, my father and I, though exhausted after a very long day, enjoyed the atmosphere which teemed with hope. His story touched me deeply.

After this summer, my father and I have given our time and energy to help the poor living in remote areas of Taiwan, where poverty, malnutrition, and pestilence are still problematic. Whether helping to deliver materials or just sharing a kind word, I have dedicated myself to doing my part for those in need. Usually, I go to the children center, where kids without parents live, to help the children with their homework. I teach them some songs and sing with them in a purpose to help them ease the fear in their deep mind. I enjoy the moment when the face of the naïve kid smiles again.

Thanks to this extra-curricular activity, I feel connected to all of humanity. The experience has provided me inspiration not only to share with those in need but also to cherish the life I have. My service to the needy has taught me to value both the people and the opportunity to serve them.


Idea about Human Technology

People in the world commonly own a computer and phone. The information on the Internet for this generation is the most abundant of the history. Social networking, mobile service, and online market are so popular and common that people take in vain how those brilliant services were developed. People forget about when electricity and artificial intelligence did not exist, ancient people rely on their own best technologies to develop their cultures and learn information. People forget about the best technology in the world has been the human body since human species evolved. Yet, people try so hard to search the best tool to help their civilization.

The idea came from the in class writing. Being a super apple fan, I always want to be like Steve Jobs who announced revolutionary products that change the world. The idea came from mobile devices. Mobile devices nowadays can receive emails, surf Internet, and download applications then store in the hardware. Putting biomedical engineering and electrical engineering together as the group was formed, I found the common feature of how neurons using electrical signal to communicate with each other. The neurons add or minus electrons to give order or receive order from brains.

If we can transfer neurons to neurons between bodies just as mobile devices, people can get rid of cellular phones. Plus, brains are the most intelligent hardware in the world. You don’t need to update firmware nor will it eat space. Brains, from research, are only used up to ten percent in average human lives. If the idea is applied, human bodies can send emails, patterns, plans, reminders, and charts to each other by the simple neurons the nature evolves.

The difference between a warm human body and cold technological device is that one has emotion and one is made of plastic and metal. There are hundreds of emotion pattern in communication application such as Skype, Facebook, and eMule, because technology and only words are hard to transfer emotions and people sometimes misunderstand each other. If human bodies are the mobile devices, we can also send brain wave and electric wave to each other then motions can easily be transferred.

The technology is at the peak currently. It is ironic we have the idea to ask people to get rid of technology. Our group wants to remind people that at the time you are replying on your electric devices, please remember you have a perfect technology which does not need battery and is created beautifully by the nature. We do not ask people to fully get rid of technology; instead, we want people to use the concept of modern technology and bring it back to our human bodies, just as I mentioned above about the neurons transferring. There are tons of examples we can create. On Wednesday, we talked about we should find another example, and find some great technologists and scientists in history advocated about getting rid of technology and relying on our own bodies.


Happiness

Happiness is easy to obtain. I agree Daniel’s idea of obtaining happiness seriously, but I prefer how Buddhists interpret happiness. Buddhists think happiness is gained when people have no desire and greed, or when they fulfill the desire and greed. There are some stress and desire I cannot find a way to solve and I want to perform the practice in Daniel’s book to try to find a resolution.

I like burgers, but I always worried about gaining fat.

I love basketball, but I have injury records of my knee.

I miss my mom, but I can only go back home once a year.

I love my new phone, but I am afraid it will get scratches.

I love socializing and hanging out with friends, but my homework needs to be done.

I have to get up early for classes, but sometimes my warm bed is just more attractive to me.

———————————————————————————————————

I like burger and I walkways worried about gaining fat, so I need to make up a heathy diet to balance.

I love basketball and I have injury records of my knee, so I spend extra thirty minutes in training room before games.

I miss my mom and I can only go back once a year, so I call my mom when I have free time and order plan tickets earlier, and start counting down days.

I love my new phone and I am afraid it will get scratches, so I spend some money on case and monitor protector.

I love socializing and hanging out with friends and my homework needs to be done, so time management is important. When it comes the the time to study, focus and try not to be distracted.

I have to get up early for classes and sometimes my warm bed is just more attractive to me, so I adjust my sleeping time earlier to wake up earlier for homework and shower.

Some of these worries seem mundane, but mundane situations are the main source of unhappiness. Buddhists state that the status of God is the status when your mood is calm and happy and cannot be disturbed by anything. No desire, no greed, and no selfishness exist in your mind. This is the highest level of being noble and people in lives should keep working to achieve. For most people, the level is too hard to pursuit. Finding solutions for stress and worries is more likely to gain happiness.

For me, these are some of the sources of stress. Writing down the solutions does not equal to solving in real life. Sometimes, real life is harder than writing an English assignment. It is also hard to totally follow the solutions which I actually know about them. Working on gaining happiness is a continuum goal for human.

 

 

Picture link:http://www.google.com/imgres?q=happiness&um=1&hl=en&client=safari&sa=N&rls=en&biw=1085&bih=618&tbm=isch&tbnid=oP5CnnxCSzzUHM:&imgrefurl=http://www.deliveringhappiness.com/blog/&docid=zvLUD55TbVLo_M&imgurl=http://www.deliveringhappiness.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/happyball.jpg&w=1024&h=768&ei=voixTo3hOZGatweVjf2cAg&zoom=1&iact=hc&vpx=372&vpy=306&dur=504&hovh=115&hovw=169&tx=134&ty=83&sig=106888859231195640795&page=1&tbnh=114&tbnw=168&start=0&ndsp=19&ved=1t:429,r:8,s:0


Cat and Dog

Once upon a time, the dog and the cat were good friends. One day, cat saw the candies in the dog’s pocket, so it asked for them. The dog told the cat if you can tell me how many candies there are, I can give you all. The cat said five. The dog gave three candies to the cat and said, “I owe you two more. I will give them to you tomorrow.”

Picture link: http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_N_mOB63qPaE/Snc19V-AfYI/AAAAAAAAJfY/x3xO9SWkPCY/s400/cat-and-dog2.jpg&imgrefurl=http://animalszooguru.blogspot.com/2010/01/funny-dogs-and-cats-pictures-photos.html&h=372&w=351&sz=37&tbnid=ZzNHz54uj8kwGM:&tbnh=90&tbnw=85&prev=/search%3Fq%3Ddog%2Band%2Bcat%26tbm%3Disch%26tbo%3Du&zoom=1&q=dog+and+cat&docid=Hcrtzs20BaI5EM&sa=X&ei=-4ixTuDLJ8fqtgfmnKCVAg&ved=0CD4Q9QEwAQ&dur=645


A Poem

Last night after I finished reading assignment, I started thinking about what percentage do we spend on literature in an engineering school. It turned out probably a day of my reading assignments in high school could be equal to a week of reading literature in college. How surprising the huge difference is! I started to think what we did in English classes in high school; some were fun, some were not, but teachers assigned homework because of certain purposes. I thought of having poetry class in my second semester of senior year. Although it was boring to me, it gave a sense of appreciating poetry. How about let’s write a poem again!!

Topic: Start something about apology but with a mocking tone.

This is my poem

Please Forgive Me  

 

What I really want to say is,

I stole your mechanic pencil.

 

You would probably be finding it,

during the testing period.

 

Forgive me. I don’t care. I lost my pencil,

and yours look so much like mine.

It’s not stealing, maybe you stole mine.


Three Giants in BME GaTech

Biomedical Engineering Department in Georgia Tech is ranked number two in the nation, which is one of the outstanding majors of Georgia Tech. The faculty members in the department are also excellent at their fields of researches.

Dr. Joseph M. Le Doux was a winner of 2005 Educational Partnership Award. He mainly researches in gene therapy, gene transfer technologies, and applications of gene therapy to cellular and tissue engineering.

Todd C. McDevitt has a Ph.D. degree in University of Washington. His researches are what I want to do in the future. Dr. McDevitt researches in stem cell engineering, cell and tissue engineering, and regenerative biomaterials.

Richard Nicolas is the chair of applied physiology in Georgia Tech. His areas of research include; mechanism of motor coordination, role of sensory feedback for posture and locomotion, and musculoskeletal biomechanics.

The questions I would like to ask them

  1. Did you find your interest when you are in college?
  2. Is this what you want to do when you were a child?
  3. If you could go back to your college life, would you pick a different major?
  4. What do you want to do more in your area of research?
  5. How can your research change the world?
  6. Do you encourage students to involve in your area of research?
  7. What do BME people usually do in their careers?
  8. Do you encourage students to go to industry or stay in college campuses after graduate?
  9. What are your advise for BME freshmen?
  10. What is your vision of BME?
  11. Do you think BME students should also have a minor so they will not be restricted in their careers?
  12. Do you think medical school is the traditional and main reason that students major in BME?
  13. Do you like Goergia Tech?
  14. What are the characteristics of Goergia Tech students?
  15. What can be distinguish between Georgia Tech students and other college students?

People Who Chase Dreams

Steve Jobs– the formal CEO of Apple Computer. iMac, iPod, iPhone and iPad were invented and designed by him. He was a visionary of the world. When he revealed a phone with only one button on a phone, he changed people’s views of the world. Steve Jobs never stopped. He did not want status quo. He was so crazy because he thought he could change the world. He loved doing what he did and that was the reason he was so passionate at his work. He was arrogant and he pursued perfection. He did not make products people need, but he made products that made people need them. His famous quote is, “I hate dumb people, but even dumb people can use my products.

Chein-Ming Wang is a Taiwanese major league baseball pitcher who currently plays for Washington Nationals. He was a formal Yankees who had 19 wins in two straight and had the best winning percentage in 2006 and 2007. He was the first pitcher who pitched on the opening game of the new Yankees Stadium in 2009. He had a season-ended injury and had an arm surgery. People said it is impossible for a pitcher to have an arm surgery and fully recover. Wang recovered and trained for two years. He never gave up. At the end of the season, Wang pitched seven games and won four of them. Wang was silent in the team. He observed his opponents. The most important thing is he never give up.

Satoru Iwata is the Nintendo chief. Since 2000 when the formal company’s chief retired, Satoru involved in Nintendo’s video game designing. Kirby is the famous cartoon character he designed. Several video game platforms were designed and invented by him, including Wii, Wii Feet, and Nintendo 3DS. He also involved in first drawing of Maria and the video game Super Mario World. He found his interest early in his career and developed along in his career.


My Dream

For four years, my father has suffered from a weak circulation system because of his weak kidneys. Despite having taken a long course of treatment, my father’s condition has grown worse and we all wonder about the true effect of the medicine. Maybe the reason is that nowadays doctors give prescriptions to patients depending on symptoms the patients have, but not on the body condition of the individual patient. My dream is to design medicine for individual patients that can accentuate efficiency with minimal side effects by using their unique case histories and profiles.

To invent this medicine, I need a super computer to store cases and body conditions of patients in the world. Today, patients have different case histories in different hospitals; sometimes people go to see different doctors. This computer will automatically combine and update information about the case after the patient sees doctors in hospitals all over the world. While the doctor dispenses the prescription by the Internet, the super computer would provide information and warnings to preclude relapses into old illnesses, so that the innovational medicines would be produced to reduce the side effects normal tablets usually have. Besides, the medicines will expand their efficiency; for example, the goal might be decreasing high blood pressure or reducing weight, depending on the patient’s body condition.

The procedure to produce this medicine is intricate. When the doctor prepares to call the patient in, the name with the case and physical condition will show on the computer connected to the super computer. For instance, if I have a fever, the doctor can see the records of my prior case by which he can be informed that I was once plagued with facial paralysis and has a disposition to gain weight. The doctor will, therefore, mandate the combination of the pills without ingredients to re-germinate the old disease and to increase appetite. Medicine should also have salutary traits; if the doctor sees that an old man has high blood pressure or osteoporosis, he can include the ingredient to cure these sicknesses.

An objection might be that the pills have to be bigger than any other drugs. In fact, the super computer will implant a tiny microchip that can be digested for the purpose of guiding the drug to its necessary target through circulation. The brand-new febrifuges, as humans swallow, will first dissolve, deliver to the head and reduce a person’s temperature, thus maximizing the drug potency and minimizing the drug’s size.

This dream needs effort and resources to achieve. Georgia Tech is a college that I can learn the required knowledge and that I can work with talented students and world-classed professors. I believe by following professors’ instructions, I am able to invent this new drug and new system to help long-suffering patients. I was not able to help my father in his lifetime; however, this fact inspires me and pushes me to work even harder to chase my dream.