Quote:
Originally Posted by davidthefat
I purposely did not want to use the CMUCams because I honestly want to experience the process of making such algorithms. Because this is not all about winning. I first took this challenge to push myself and really dedicate and learn. I am also purposely staying away from OpenCV and other libraries for the same reason. Yes I have read in a lot of posts about why not to reinvent the wheel. I do it because I love doing it, it builds character and you learn a lot more than just reusing what some one has made. I push myself now so I don't have to push my self later, I wish I had learned earlier on. I wish I have learned it in elementary or middle school because that really is a valuable thing to learn. When I am doing my graduate work, the things I work on will not be canned projects like the ones we do in science class, I would be the forefront of my area of expertise. If I learn to do it on my own, its alot better than learning it too late. Its different from just plugging in the variables in a equation and getting the right answer than understanding why and how you got that answer. I believe the latter is what I strive for.
People will disagree with my mentality especially engineers, but I feel that is what I need as a student and as a person. My counselor told me that no one will just wait for me to help me, I have to actively seek help if I need it. I always think that if you reinvent the wheel, chances of you doing it better is greater than just reusing it. If you just reuse it, you will never be able to improve it.
Also if I fail, I learn, which in my book is success.
"I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work." -Thomas Edison
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I think you're getting caught up on this reuse concept. Based on your logic, pretty much every respected innovation currently on the market is not innovative, as it reused something.
Your goal of biting off 100 times more than you can chew is probably going to slow your learning process overall, there is nothing wrong with learning things in smaller steps.
Your ambition is good, your plan isn't so much.