u/powerful_starfish

Industry problem statement for EDI ?

I've heard that some students get an industry problem statement for their EDI/course project instead of choosing a normal project topic.

How do you actually get one? Do we have to approach companies ourselves, or do faculty members help in connecting us with industries? Is it worth the extra effort, and does it make any difference during placements or internships?

Would love to hear from anyone who's been through the process or has any idea about how it works.

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u/powerful_starfish — 2 days ago
▲ 29 r/vitpune

Sometimes random people make your day

Yesterday was my DS lab exam and honestly, I went completely Bhagwan bharose 😭

I didn't studied, the teacher is very strict, and I was already stressed before the exam even started.maine socha tha aaj fielding set hai...

Then randomly, someone sat beside me during the exam. We didn’t know each other at all, but she genuinely helped me with code and algo. whenever I got stuck. Honestly, she helped me with full code.

The funny part is, even though the teacher is strict, the lab exam was very chill 😭

But still, when you sit stressed and tense about everything, and some random person helps you without any reason, it genuinely reminds you that good and genuine people still exist in our college.

Thank you buddy, you probably forgot about it already, but your gesture was genuinely very wholesome :)

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u/powerful_starfish — 2 months ago
▲ 40 r/vitpune

Unpopular opinion: college club culture is overrated

One thing I have noticed in college is some club people genuinely start believing they are above everyone else.

The ego shift after getting a position in some committee. Suddenly they talk like they’re leading something important when half the work is just forwarding messages, forcing attendance, bootlicking seniors and posting stories during events.

And the funniest part is how they repeatedly judge people who stay away from all this.

Bro not everyone wants to spend their entire college life in internal politics, fake networking and running behind every event happening on campus.

Some people are actually focused on their own life instead of treating college clubs like some personality achievement.

Being absent from clubs doesn’t mean someone is inactive or talentless. A lot of people just don’t need positions, badges and linkedin captions to feel important.

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u/powerful_starfish — 2 months ago
▲ 21 r/vitpune

Off-Campus internships ?

I’ve heard that being active on X can actually help a lot with off-campus internships, especially for startup opportunities. Haven’t tried it . Any advice from seniors or anyone who got internships this way?

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u/powerful_starfish — 2 months ago