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FAQs
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How can I sign up for WeChat on my Mac without owning a phone?
For all you Mac users with Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion) or later, simply download WeChat for Mac in the App Store and scan the QR code to log in. Along with being able to chat with WeChat friends and groups on your desktop, the Mac App makes it easy to transfer files from your mobile device to your desktop and vice versa with the “File Transfer” capability. Just drag and drop your photos, media and other files into the “File Transfer” folder. Or upload desktop files directly within a chat to send to friends. As long as you’re logged into WeChat for Mac, alerts will pop up on your computer’s menu bar without notifications on your phone. WeChat for Mac also supports Sight videos, allows users to view chat histories forwarded by friends and search contacts as well as groups. So whether you’re chatting on your desktop, iPad, or smartphone device, WeChat constantly aims to innovate and deliver you the best cross-platform social communications experience possible.
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As a foreigner, how impressed are you with India?
I am very impressed with India. I love it and lived there for 6 years.Here are some pros and cons of living in India from my perspective.When I was 27 I was a Biology teacher in a small town near Melbourne, Australia. One day I was talking to the librarian about international teaching, and she told me that you can get a teaching job in India. She explained the perks like being paid to teach, flights, living expenses, medical insurance etc. I thought ‘wow sign me up, what a great opportunity to save some money, travel and have an amazing adventure!’A couple of months later I attended a recruitment fair, and was offered a job immediately in Bangalore. So I packed my bags and dove into the magical world of being an expat in India.Welcome to IndiaFrom the first few weeks of living in Bangalore, I just loved it.India is a feast for the eyes, nose, taste buds and most definitely ears! I remember noticing the bright colours of the sari’s and salwar’s many women were wearing, as well as how many men had a moustache.India is VERY loud. There is constant honking of car, bus, auto rickshaw, motorbike and lorry horns. It is actually encouraged, with most lorries and truck being painted with “Horn please, OK”.The smells… One smell that reminds me of India is jasmine flowers. Many women wear jasmine in their hair and it reminds me of being adorned with a garland of them as I came off the plane when I first arrived. I am always transported back to that first night when I smell jasmine flowers. There's also strong smelling food, such as curry dinners, and of course more offensive smells like pollution or public urination.Living in India for 6 years changed my life completely. I truly had so many positive experiences, but of course there is always a negative side which I think is also important to discuss. I am beyond excited to give you:The Pro’s and Con’s of Being an Expat in IndiaThe Pro's:It's Mind OpeningBeing an expat in India helped me not only gain a better understanding of a country and unique culture, but it opened my eyes to my own self-understanding.This is my own most signNow Pro for living in India.I thought of myself as a fairly open minded person before I came to India. However, I’m embarrassed to say that I thought everyone would listen to Bollywood music and have less knowledge of the “Western” world than me. Boy was I wrong. Many of the most well read, well educated, open minded people I know are from India. They are far more knowledgeable about history, literature, science, geography and even topics I thought I would be safe on, such as 80s rock music.I found myself at a Michael Jackson themed party a few months after I moved to Bangalore, and often went to Karaoke at pubs where all the music was western. Fellow expat Sharell Cook seems to have had a similar experience to me. She embraced everything Indian and enjoyed her time there, although she offers a very realistic perspective to the challenges of India in this article.There's RomanceAt least in my experience! I met my husband in India (he’s Indian) and before that dated a few Indian guys. I never had any trouble meeting anyone, but of course I had to be social. One tip is to just say yes when you are invited to a party, dinner at someone’s house etc. India was the place that helped me find the love of my life.Meeting Open-hearted Welcoming PeopleIndian people will welcome you into their home with open arms. My most striking example of this was after a couple of weeks of living in Bangalore when I was taken for a tour of a local village. I was invited into the home of a family in the village even though they didn’t speak any English and had never met me. They insisted on giving me cold drinks and having me sit down in their home.I've always wondered what would my reaction have been if I had seen people of another nationality standing out front of my house looking around? I’m ashamed to say that if I’m honest with myself I doubt I would have invited them in…Another example is when I moved into a new apartment. My neighbor brought me food every day and we ended up becoming great friends. She was able to help me with where to get my hair done, shops close by, getting a maid etc.Attending Weddings and PartiesIf you are open to meeting a lot of new people there are many opportunities to do so in India! Weddings are HUGE (my own wedding was small for India at 350 people), and an invitation commonly means you can invite your family and close friends. I found myself regularly attending a wedding, even when I hadn’t met the bride and groom. India always has some form of party or social function going on.Religious and Cultural ImmersionIndia is extremely diverse in terms of food, culture, religion, clothes etc. Each state has its own language and dress and even regions within states have different styles of food and customs. Just some of the religions and ethnic groups found in India are: Muslim, Sikh, Catholic, Christian, Persian, and Anglo-Indian. After 6 years in India I still have so much to learn but have had many unforgettable experiences. I went to Eid celebrations each year, learning about Hindu Puja and doing Puja for my car, took part in Anglo-Indian Catholic Easter celebrations, the Kerala Onam (harvest) celebration, and the Hindu Holi celebration where you throw water and colour on each other.The Indian FoodIndian food is amazing!! Before I moved to India I thought I loved Indian food, but I soon realized I had hardly tried anything!Every region has a different style of food, which made for a never-ending culinary adventure! Some of my favorites are pandhi curry, the seafood and chicken ghee of Mangalore, and the coffee and breakfast dishes of South India. Even after living in India for 6 years, I’ve yet to try so many of the amazing dishes.Some of these next ‘pros' are the perks that come with being a working expat in India. Being relocated by a company means these added luxuries become quite affordable.Full-Time Maid & CookHiring help around the house in India is very affordable. A maid will sweep, mop, dust, do your washing and all of your cooking if you wish, every single day. This may seem like a lot of cleaning, but India is quite dusty, so to keep your house spick and span (especially if you have kids) it is good to have a full time maid. You can get someone full-time for around $150-$200 a month. You can also get a part-time maid, or just someone to cook meals for a lot less (around $60 a month). You won't have to spend any time on the chores that keep you busy every day in a western country. All of your spare time is leisure or social time, instead of keeping house.DriverI personally drove my own car when I lived in India, as I love driving. If you're not too comfortable with maneuvering Indian roads you can hire a driver. A full-time driver is around $300 a month.GardenerI had a gardener who came every day just to keep the leaves swept up and clean up after my dog, which only cost me $10 a month.A Sparkling Clean CarMost apartment buildings have a security guard that can double as a helper. When you move into your apartment, he will likely come to your house and offer to clean your car for you every day. I paid my guy $10 a month to clean the outside of the car every day, and once a week for the inside.Cheap LabourHiring a tradesman to do jobs around the house, such as change a light bulb, repair tap washers, install your home theatre etc, is very affordable. It will likely cost around $5-$10 for an hour or two of work including materials.Home Delivery For EverythingBasically every store delivers. You can get your groceries delivered, food from your favorite restaurant, even home and personal goods. I’ve even had my security guard pick up things from nearby shops for a little tip. Ubereats is also available all over the place.Cheap Fast Internet & TVAt the time of writing you can get 100 MBPS fibre optic internet with a download limit of 400GB in Bangalore for 1159 Rupees a month! (Which is under $20 USD) I also had every channel available for around $150 a year.Tax Free Salary?A lot of western countries have a very attractive tax treaty with India. For the first two years that you live there you don’t have to pay tax, so you get to enjoy your entire salary tax free.Great Expat BenefitsUtilities: As part of most expat contracts your utility bills will be paid for you. If it’s not included, it's still cheap. Electricity is about $25 a month in a two bedroom apartment.New Apartment in gated community: Expats will be helped to find an apartment or house (depending on your position, salary etc) in a very safe gated community with a swimming pool, gym, and beautiful gardens. Some expats, for example IT or bank executives will have very nice houses e.g. 3 stories with a lift etc. Teachers accommodation will be more basic but very nice.Flights home every year: You and your family members will have flights to your home country included in your package if you work in an international school or as an expat in a large company.Global Medical Insurance: Medical Insurance will be included in your contract which is great for peace of mind. Rest assured that India has some excellent hospitals.Easy Escape to 5-Star HotelsIf it all gets too much, there are always a number of 5-star hotels around to lap up some comforts of home. Most hotels and nice restaurants in the city have “brunch” on Sunday which includes a huge buffet spread, sparkling wine, cocktails, often activities for kids and use of the hotel pool for around $60 a head ($30 or less for children).The Con's:Constant NoiseThe most apparent sound in the city is the honking of vehicles. It is incessant. Basically drivers use the horn to say ‘hello I’m here behind/beside you'. Over time I became used to it, but it was very overwhelming when I first moved there. Another sound you will come across is music from temples when various festivals are on. They will blare music extremely loudly at all hours of the day and night.DirtA lot of people complain about the dirt in India. The streets are dusty, so if you wear flip flops while walking around you will get dirty feet for sure. There is a lot of rubbish in some areas but in general it is collected regularly. There is a some litter around in parks and gardens but generally there are large beautiful gardens where you can relax and go for nice walks. It really depends on the area you are living in or visiting.Road AccidentsDrivers are very “rash” as they call it in India. People weave all over the road and often have small scrapes and bumps into each other. Fortunately, the traffic moves quite slowly a lot of the time so usually there is little damage in any accidents.People Don't Say “No”It is part of the Indian culture to never say no, even when they should. If you ask your tailor, “has my sari blouse been finished?” they will say: “I have started the job, I’m almost finished, I’m working on it”, but they will never say “No, it’s not done”. This goes for everything, even asking for directions. If the person doesn’t know how to get to where you are asking about, they will tell you wrong directions, just so they don’t have to say no.My most hilarious example of this is when I asked where the restaurant was in a mall. Clearly the shop assistant didn’t understand what I was asking so they said Out of Stock madam. It can be very frustrating to never get a straight answer when you want to know when or if something can be done.Full Disclosure- I absolutely loved living in India, so it was very easy for me to find many positives and I have to wrack my brain to think of negatives. The negatives on this list really didn’t affect my day to day life too much. If you want to live in India, it helps if you have a fairly “cruisy” personality, time frames are very fluid, things very often don’t go to plan – although somewhat frustrating at times I mostly saw life as a big adventure and was open to learning and taking it in my stride. If you need a lot of structure and planning and get anxious if your day doesn’t go exactly as you had anticipated, then India may not be the best place for you to live.My advice for anyone considering living in India: Go for it!ABOUT THE AUTHOR:Kristen DiasI run Travel Karma – a place you'll find advice and tips for travelling with kids and reviews of places we have had adventures together.My family are all about adventures, new experiences and creating unforgettable memories. We took our daughter to Thailand when she was 7 weeks old and she has since been abroad every year, to Sri Lanka, Malaysia, India and Vietnam as well as lots of trips in Australia. Our son travelled to Perth and then Vietnam when he was 14 weeks old and also travelled to India before he turned 1. If you can relate to this then you may like to follow us on Instagram and Facebook
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How stressful is it being a professor at a top university? What do university professors do in their free time?
I kid you not, the first thing I did when I read the question was chuckle at the bit about free time :-)OK, deep breath. (as usual, answering from perspective of CS faculty in the USA)Yes, being a professor at a top university is stressful. I saw it in my faculty advisors at Yale and Berkeley, and I felt it first hand as faculty at UC Santa Barbara (assistant, associate then full professor), and now at Univ. of Chicago (chaired full professor). But then again, so is any other highly competitive job. Certainly, if you make it this far along, then you’ve been trained through experience on how to handle the stress well. So it is stressful, but we all have our own ways of handling it. Some approaches are not very healthy, and can lead to early burnout or disruptions in the non-academia parts of your life.Just saying work is stressful is not very helpful. Instead I will say that in general, faculty at top schools have far more work than there is time to do. There is no efficient schedule that we can come up with to actually get everything done. It’s generally impossible. Instead, our scheduling algorithms are more like prioritization algorithms, with the full knowledge that low priority items are likely to be ignored and forgotten. The more senior we get, the more work tends to come our way, and the more things fall off our plate and on to the floor. The number of “Hi, did you get my email about XYZ, because you never responded” emails I’ve gotten has dramatically increased over the years. A common piece of advice between faculty (that is rarely heeded) is that we all (and especially younger faculty) need to learn to say NO more often.Along those lines, we generally don’t actually have free time. We protect our family time fiercely. Outside of that, we just have time when we’re switching between tasks. And there are times when we should be working, and our brain just refuses to cooperate. To keep a good life balance, faculty tend to have to work hard to constrain the hours when we work, so work does not consume our lives. In addition to spending time with family and friends, faculty colleagues I know well generally have one or two hobbies they are passionate about and try hard to maintain. For some it’s long distance running, for others it’s cycling, travel or creating music, and others dance or art. For me personally, it’s a fairly even split between fantasy football, going to the gym, and travel (and of course Quora).Just to drive home the point about endless workload, here’s a list of work-related tasks that have come up regularly to consume my time this past year:Teaching activities: lecturing, prepping for lecture, writing/updating homeworks/class projects, grading exams/project papers/presentations, meeting with TAs, handling student requests/emails.Mentoring my (mostly PhD) students: 1-on-1 meetings, project meetings, signing forms, buying/reimbursing equipment they need, writing letters of references for jobs/internships/fellowships, giving feedback on paper drafts, conference talks, job talks, posters.Driving research: reading papers in related areas, brainstorming and planning projects, meeting new colleagues in CS and other departments to exchange research ideas, teleconferences w/ collaborators, dealing with IRB and legal requirements related to projects, buying/reimbursing/monitoring equipment/resources, writing presentations, writing funding proposals to NSF/DARPA/industry programs, writing annual reports for funded projects, managing funding and expenditures, attend research conferences.Work for the department: typically 3–4 committees with lots of meetings. For this past year, I was heavily involved in faculty hiring (reading/evaluating faculty apps, discussion/inviting candidates, hosting candidates on-site interviews, leading candidate discussions, recruiting candidates after offers), graduate affairs (evaluating grad students, changing PhD curriculum, dealing with any issues that pop up), graduate admissions (travel to recruit students, reading/evaluating PhD & MS apps, interviewing students, discussion, decisions on admits, recruiting admitted students, hosting visits), undergrad curriculum (changes to undergrad curriculum)Work for the campus: lots of ad hoc things that pop up. Participate in invited panels, give talks to visitors from government agencies/industry visitors/alumni, meetings for various campus-wide or inter-departmental initiatives, interact with the media and press as a limited representative of the department (and occasionally campus).Service for wider research community: serve on program committees for conferences (lots of this, reading and reviewing paper submissions), serve as chair on conferences, travel to serve on evaluation panels for funding agencies (US and other countries), write tenure letters for younger colleagues, write promotion to full letters for younger colleagues, write job letters for students/former colleagues, write letters for PhD applications by undergrads, serve on editorial board for journals, travel to serve on panels for conferences, travel to give keynotes for conferences/workshops.Various types of outsignNow: visit and give talks at companies, visit/give invited talks/meet faculty at other universities, serve as judge on hackathons, advise K-12 STEM/CS organizations, host undergraduate summer interns, host high school summer interns.I probably missed some details here or there, but I think I got the bulk of it. I probably do a bit more service than some, and there is generally less service type work for more junior faculty. Hopefully this gives you a sense of what faculty at good schools have to work with.
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What are the conditions to get a dual citizenship for the UK and the USA? Is it possible to have both?
It depends what is your present status. If you are neither a UK citizen nor a US citizen already, then I can’t offer much advice, other than that it’d be a complex and long journey, if even possible.If you are already a UK citizen by birth, to become a US citizen you’d first have to acquire a visa in order to stay for a set amount of time in the USA - a work visa, sponsored by an employer, or a student visa, or a marriage/fiance visa if you are or are intended to be married to a US citizen. It’s not an easy route, nor a quick one. I did it, and in my case it entailed my now husband, a US citizen, staying with me in England for around a year. He had to acquire a visa to do so, and an extension of it after a given period, while I applied for a marriage visa. There’s money involved at every stage - it’s not cheap!Once we were married, in England, I applied for a visa to come to the USA with my husband. This took a while, and involved a trip to London for medical examination and an appointment at the US Embassy.Once settled in the USA , after selling my UK property, and sending what I could of my belongings by sea, my visa covered me for a limited amount of time, after which I had to apply for an extension. This extension would, I think, have covered a further 10 years stay. In the meantime, 4 years after arriving here, I applied for US citizenship - this was not obligatory, I chose to do so. It took a while due to backlogs in the system, but eventually I took the citizenship test and went through all the required red tape, attended a ceremony - about which I’ve written already at Quora.I held both passports for 10 years, but haven’t renewed my UK passport as I have no intention of travelling out of the country - but I remain a dual citizen.If you originally obtained a visa via employment or student routes, then I am not certain how the journey would proceed. Provided that the employment continued, you’d probably have to renew the visa, until such time as you could apply for citizenship. If the student route - I think that visa would not cover you for long enough unless you obtained employment here and changed your visa type. There’s a British Ex-pats forum where they freely offer advice on all routes and all visa types - just Google search “British Ex-Pats Forum”, go to the USA section.If you are already a US citizen and wish to become a UK citizen, the above route would work in the other direction, but I do believe it’s slightly less daunting that way, from the experience we had when my husband stayed in the UK. I am not certain that the US government would consider you still a US citizen, though, were you to become a UK citizen.
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What were your “It's not what it looks like!” moments?
What were your "It's not what it looks like!" moments? Oh boy! I have an innocent story to tell.I have a friend that I’ve always had good chemistry with. We never dated but everyone suspected that there was something more than friendship going on. Besides, we’ve been very close since we were 10, hit puberty and realized that we were attracted to one another but never really developed anything more than that. However, we have this certain level of physical affection that we have gotten used to over the years.People weren’t buying this “we’re just really friends” and always jokingly give instructions “No holding hands!” or “Don’t be too touchy!”O...
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