Day 6 – Nuclear Drill

Today, I sat in on a nuclear drill at the Emergency Management building. Federal law requires that every nuclear power plant goes through a nuclear emergency drill once every other year. Today was the Catawba plant’s drill. The Catawba plant is operated by Duke Energy and is located in South Carolina under Charlotte. Although the plant itself is out of state, several North Carolina counties lie within the “danger zone”, meaning that they are close enough to the plant that they would be affected by radiation if the plant were to experience any issues.

Outside of the Emergency Management building.

During the drill, each individual has a certain list of things they must accomplish and demonstrate that they can do successfully. For example, some are tasked with drafting press releases, setting up shelters, decontamination, or monitoring a hotline for rumor control. It was very interesting to see how many different people with different roles all come together to ensure public safety during events like this. There was also a line set up on the conference phone that the departments in South Carolina and North Carolina tuned in to in order to make sure that everyone was on the same page. This communication is critical to public safety and everything running smoothly because it guarantees that both states are releasing the same information, thus preventing public panic or confusion.

Outside of the Emergency Management building.

As the level of emergency classification intensified, so did the importance of maintaining this communication. Today’s drill reiterated the significance of effective communication, which is a lesson that has been very prominent the last six days and one which I’m certain will stick with me long after the commencement of my work experience program.

Outside of the Emergency Management building.

Day 6 at Pentair: Mixing Drinks

Casting Drawing
Machining Drawing

After an enjoyable 3-day weekend, it was time to head back to the office today. The day consisted mostly of meetings and learning another step in the engineering process. At 10:00, Mrs. Rai and I headed to the Arctic Ocean for the first meeting of the day. Ironically, this conference room was warmer than the rest of the building. This meeting was a weekly check in with one of Mrs. Rai’s design engineers who works from Texas. She reported to Mrs. Rai what she had been up to for the past week and they discussed future plans. After the meeting, we headed back to the cubicle where Mrs. Rai printed out three long sheets of paper, with drawings and lines and numbers and other confusing things. She told me to try to dissect as much as I could, and after about 5 minutes, I was lost. She then explained that this is the document that engineers send suppliers, the people who will actually make the product. She further explained that most suppliers will require two types of outlines or drawings: machining and casting. The casting is the overall shape of the product, and the measurements don’t have to be too accurate. The supplier uses the casting outline to create a ‘rough draft’ of the product. When they want to fine tune this, they look to the ‘machining’ outline. This is much more specific, with measurements going to the thousands of an inch! After all of the explaining, I think I finally understood everything that was on the originally confusing pages. It was pretty neat to see the drawings and plus I felt really legit holding the large pieces of paper that contained such complex images. After this fun learning experience, it was lunch and then the second meeting of the day. 

This meeting was one of the longer ones I have joined, lasting for around an hour. There were four people on the call, two from Florida and one from Canada. This meeting was to discuss of of Mrs. Rai’s side projects, a tracker pro. I don’t know too much about the product, but judging from the meeting, it was not ready for sale. The meeting seemed to be all over the place, but I think Mrs. Rai did a great job of keeping everyone focused on the subject at hand. After this lengthy meeting, both Mrs. Rai and I were quite tired, so she decided to take a break and show me something interesting in the break room. All of the filtering equipment on the floor was made by Pentair, obviously, which meant that they had some really tricked out faucets. One of the sinks would release carbonated water, and on the side of the sink were different flavors that could be added to this special water. So, I spent the next 20 minutes exploring and mixing and drinking the flavored water. They were all pretty good, but now my stomach kind of hurts, but it was worth it! 

Walk West: Day 6

This morning when I came into the office around 10AM, I had a little time to peruse through the WEP posts from other people. It was intriguing to be able to see what everyone else was doing and what they were taking away from their own individual experiences. After that, I started doing some work for monthly reports for their clients. Each month they create a report that shows how many impressions, likes, clicks, etc. that each of their social media platforms (typically Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and Youtube) got. Through one of their applications, they can then compare and contrast their numbers from this month to previous months. This is a good way to reevaluate what strategies they’re using and if they need to change anything to improve. For a quick lunch break, I joined Suki and Luke at a cute coffee shop on campus. We got to catch up with each other and learn more about our different internships. After, I got back to the office for some more work. When I got back, most people were busy with individual tasks and did not have anything specific for me to work on. So, with regards to this I decided to do some research on Communications and Marketing programs at colleges. Being that (obviously) I am at a Digital Marketing agency, that also includes communications, I thought this would be a good time to delve further into it. After completing lots of research, I packed up and headed home for the day.

French West Vaughn Day 6

French West Vaughn Day 6 Blog

Today was a more relaxed day and we were back working with the Account Executive of the Company. We spent the whole day researching about Research Wireless Relay Product Launch. This product is a phone for younger kids. It’s cross between a phone and a walkie-talkie. It does not have a screen, but it is able to be used to communicate with people. With this technology Parents have a way of contacting their children and keeping track of them. This phone is categorized as a child safe phone. We researched different magazines, websites, and shows to could feature this new product and help advertise it. Today was a more chill day, but I appreciated it.

citation: Ashley. “Republic Wireless Relay Alternative Kids Phone.” Gadget Flow, Gadget Flow, thegadgetflow.com/portfolio/republic-wireless-alternative-kids-phone/.

Day 6

Today was my second to last day but we still had tons of work to get done. Once stand-up was over, Nathan and I were tasked with creating a program where a user could input a ZIP code and in return the system would print out the time zone they were in. Our original plan was to use the internet and find an API that could do this, and we were in fact able to find one. The issue was that the API would cost money to use more than one time per hour and this couldn’t work because our code was meant to be used for a real customer who would need to access this feature more frequently. Luckily, Nathan was able to find an excel sheet online that had every zip code in the United States and their relevant time zones. We knew how to read the excel sheets on the form creating program, but we ran into another issue: daylight savings. The excel sheet had this included in a separate column, but we had to figure out how to account for this in our code. Luckily, Nathan and I were able to get it working and it was really exciting to have our code work and to know that it would eventually end up in a consumers’ hands. After lunch, there was an office meeting to discuss all the bugs that they needed to fix, and this took some time. Every one of the programmers shared what they were working on and what needed to be fixed next. Can’t wait for tomorrow!

Day 6 at Crowder

Today was very relaxed and quick as most of the office was out on a site visit. While the majority was gone, I stayed back due to age regulations (you have to be eighteen to visit a site). One person I spent the majority of the time with was Therese Dean, the head of the Co-Op program. She gave me a lecture on what companies look for on resumes, how to formulate one, what to do at career fair to present myself the best I can, and how to target my extra-curricular activities to my mechanical engineering interests. All in all, this was extremely helpful in teaching me the realistic side of the resume and the practicality of some of the information. After this, I had the privaledge of seeing some old resumes to see if I caught on and then was revealed that I understood the basic premise of it well. Every student I would’ve accepted was on the giant wall of Co-Ops. I look forward to what tomorrow may bring as it will be the first full day as a seventeen-year-old.

Day 5- Weed and a Top Secret Mission

Day Six at French West Vaughn was by far the most interesting day of work so far. Today we were shadowing the creative department. The creative department takes care of things like naming, creating events, and the visual design of advertisements.

Today we were working with a newer Client of FWV. This particular client isolated CBD from the cannabis plant and sells them to pharmaceutical, makeup, and food companies. Currently the name of the company is XYZ but that is about to change. We were given the job of finding names that are more fitting for the things that XYZ actually does.

After that we had to create ideas to advertise for a top secret project that the FWV will be working on for the next 5 years(!!!!). These ideas were later discussed and implemented in the creative meeting afterwards.

Day 5- First Day At Southern Dermatology

Today was my first day at Southern Dermatology with Dr. Boyse! We started the day at 8:30 and ended around 5, but had 1.5 hour lunch break. Throughout the day we saw over 41 different patients! I saw a variety of things from Molluscums (water warts) to cysts, and even saw Dr. Boyse remove some moles or other various skin to later by biopsied to see if it is cancerous. I also saw Dr. Boyse do a good amount of Botox on people which explain to me how it worked and why you put botox certain places to do certain things. She even pulled of the muscle anatomy of the face and showed me in which muscles she places the Botox for certain patients. At lunch time, a drug representative brought in the lunch for the office which i was informed by the nurses happens often. Then after lunch I saw more full body checks, where they make sure there is nothing concerning, a large cyst be popped (like Dr. Pimple Popper), and many other fascinating cases! I can’t wait until tomorrow.

DAy 6 yay

Today was so fun!!!! As high school students, we really aren’t qualified to do much “real work,” but at least we can watch stuff go down. But, we had our first real assignment today!! Last week, we were tasked with ideating some ways to celebrate Wilmington, NC’s facebook page (which FWV manages) reaching 100,000 likes. Our supervisor really liked some of our ideas and let us design the actual banner. Our finished product was simple yet just what the client was looking for, and it was awesome to make something they are actually going to use.

Day6, Sales and PreSales, Jonathan Segal

Today was my favorite day so far. I spent the day with a salesman who specializes in the transportation industry, and boy was he good at talking. He went through the entire process of a sale for me, from doing the research to finding contact numbers to making the cold call to setting up a meeting to talking to the technical specialists to finally receiving credit for the sale! He also talked about the support process after the software has been installed, referring to the “loyalty” department that ensures that the customer stays happy and loyal to SAS. He also drew me a very interesting diagram on how the process of customers having data works and how that data is managed which was very interesting too; a picture of that diagram is below. At 2:00, he had a meeting which I couldn’t attend, so he dropped me off at the “Data for Good” presentation, put on by Reese’s job shadow I-sah. They talked about how SAS analytics is used to help the world in times of natural disaster and mass migration such as the earthquakes in Nepal or the Syria crisis. The entire presentation was incredibly intriguing, and at the end they asked if people with Iphone programming experience (like me) might be interested in helping with their app. I gave them my email and am waiting to hear back!

 

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