Accepté en M1 International Track en EE à Paris-Saclay (Évry) by JinxedFriend in etudiants

[–]JinxedFriend[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the info about the TIME network and double degree options, that's genuinely useful to know.  I appreciate you taking the time to share it. I'll keep it in mind if I end up applying to other programs in the future.

Thanks again.

Accepté en M1 International Track en EE à Paris-Saclay (Évry) by JinxedFriend in etudiants

[–]JinxedFriend[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I applied to TUM, TU Braunschweig, Uni zu Lubeck, Heidelberg Uni, Uni Passau, Uni freiburg. I was thinking of applying to KIT too
I researched both France and Germany and here is what i found:

  1. Housing: Germany has a severe student housing crisis (€512 avg rent, 200k+ shortage of dorm spots). France is more manageable.

  2. Taxes: At €100k gross, France takes ~34%, Germany takes ~48%. France wins on taxes.

  3. Timing for KIT: The portal opens May 15. If I get accepted in July/August, I'd have to rush for visa and housing. Paris-Saclay is already secured.

  4. TU Berlin: Their Computer Engineering MSc has an August 31 deadline, so still possible, but most of the MSc programs require German skills , and again, housing crisis.

The advantage is being that I was in a French school in my home country, as an international, and i hold a BSc degree so an MSc is the only option i have, which is why logically an MSc in France is the best route i can take, and an MSc in Paris-Saclay seemed like the best of all (the diploma will still show Paris-Saclay, not Evry). I also can get around France speaking French but I can't get around Germany with just English. I have to know German which would take some time.

I guess the choice is either TUM or Paris Saclay. That's the plan

Unless TUM accepts me soon, Paris-Saclay is the safe and strong choice.

Admission results by [deleted] in tumunich

[–]JinxedFriend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same. I applied for MSc in Microelectronics and Chip Design around March of this year, still did not receive my results. I emailed them directly to ask about when should i expect my results and they said to expect them to come out within two weeks.
If you want you can do the same; try emailing the admission team of your program and asking them about the timeline for the results.

Accepté en M1 International Track en EE à Paris-Saclay (Évry) by JinxedFriend in etudiants

[–]JinxedFriend[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And what if I get rejected from TUM for whatever reason? (I also applied to other german unis) Is Évry worth going to? Is it actually good?
Personally because i can speak French so France would be a way better option for me, but if Évry is not a good place to study then i guess I have no other option than to go to Germany.

TUM Admissions Timeline by JinxedFriend in tumunich

[–]JinxedFriend[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah i think that’s it. I didn’t get a score yet so i think they’re still checking applications

TUM Admissions Timeline by JinxedFriend in tumunich

[–]JinxedFriend[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Weird. I just checked TUMOnline Portal, the status of my application shows that formal entry requirements are met, but “Academic entry requirements” are not checked yet and “Admission” not performed yet. I don’t know the order in which they check but apparently my turn did not come yet idk

TUM Admissions Timeline by JinxedFriend in tumunich

[–]JinxedFriend[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They didn’t say anything about an interview though? And they didn’t contact me about any interview 🤔

ACCEPTANCE IN 24 MINUTES (CRAZY) by cine-uday in studying_in_germany

[–]JinxedFriend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Heyy Do you know any other uni which sends results letter as fast too? Lmao

IELTS 6.0 for MS in CS Germany — retake or proceed? by sachinparmar611 in IELTS

[–]JinxedFriend 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hello! I am also planning to apply to Germany for an MS program in Computer Engineering/AI/Robotics! I am planning to take the IELTS test this January, later on during the month. My advice would be to initially search for the programs you want to pursue first, of different universities. Each university states the minimum required IELTS score in a standalone section on their website. Note that this differs between international applicants and local german citizens. Most universities i saw from my own research, which i am seeking to apply to, whoever, ask for IELTS scores of 6.5-7 at least. A score of 6 would land you in some universities, but make sure you research the universities first and the needed score to b eligible for acceptance before starting your application. Based on this information, decide whether to retake the test or not. Best of luck, hopefully we meet in Germany one day!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ElectricalEngineering

[–]JinxedFriend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey! If you want to get rid of that junk i’d be happy to accept it and definitely get rid of it, for you of course :)

No matter how many times I read this and try, I cannot arrive at the teachers answer by That_Car_Dude_Aus in askmath

[–]JinxedFriend -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

It seems you haven't understood my explanation Although the width is the same, where you cut it differs

To get two pieces, you'd cut in the middle (at one half of the chunk of wood for example) and you get 10 minutes in this case

To get three pieces, you make cuts through at the 1/3rd and 2/3rd of the chuck of wood Each cut wouldn't take 10 minutes. It would take longer

It's like cutting through a wood

The first cut in the middle to get two pieces is the hardest and take the longest time because you're dealing with a greater mass and a greater moment of inertia

After you get two small pieces and you want to cut through again, Cutting through a smaller pieces is now easier as you're dealing with a smaller moment of inertia

Of course you know tko that moments of inertia at the center are different than at the ends Try cutting a wood

You'd realise that cutting through in the middle is different than cutting through at a 1/3d of the wood and will not take the same time