graviyera
03-08 12:00 PM
You dont need transit visa if you are traveling thru frnankfurt (my 2 cents...just travelled in Lufthansa with expired visa but valid 797...no problems...however i heard it wld be a problem if it were United...so check with the airlines).....keep in mind that one might get stuck anywhere between 4 to 8 weeks if stuck in 221g administrative processing while getting stamping in India (in my case got passport and 797 in 23 days)....something to be aware of....my friend got stamping in india with only 6 months of 797 validity remaining....hope this helps
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ronhira
07-29 11:04 PM
Carnegie Mellon University
> 51 out of 80 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (64%)
Cornell University
> 76 out of 144 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (53%)
Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)
> 193 out of 363 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (53%)
University of Florida
> 119 out of 180 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (66%)
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
> 142 out of 255 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (56%)
Purdue University
> 153 out of 218 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (70%)
Stanford University
> 128 out of 247 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (52%)
Texas A&M University
> 146 out of 184 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (79%)
numbers don't lie....... the latest is that indian students are going to other places in the world.... and indian students no longer consider US as the top destinations.....
No. of Indian students going to US falls, rises for UK - India - The Times of India (http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/No-of-Indian-students-going-to-US-falls-rises-for-UK/articleshow/6234927.cms)
y should anyone be surprised with these numbers?
> 51 out of 80 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (64%)
Cornell University
> 76 out of 144 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (53%)
Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech)
> 193 out of 363 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (53%)
University of Florida
> 119 out of 180 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (66%)
University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
> 142 out of 255 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (56%)
Purdue University
> 153 out of 218 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (70%)
Stanford University
> 128 out of 247 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (52%)
Texas A&M University
> 146 out of 184 total engineering Ph.D.s were awarded to foreign nationals (79%)
numbers don't lie....... the latest is that indian students are going to other places in the world.... and indian students no longer consider US as the top destinations.....
No. of Indian students going to US falls, rises for UK - India - The Times of India (http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/No-of-Indian-students-going-to-US-falls-rises-for-UK/articleshow/6234927.cms)
y should anyone be surprised with these numbers?
jliechty
February 18th, 2006, 08:09 PM
It's a bit of a pain to use... it shows up every flaw in my technique. I can't get away with some of the handholding sloppiness that I could with the D1. ;)
My only comparisons are the D1 and the D70, the former which I owned, and the latter which I used several times for several hours each. The D200 is definitely of a professional build, unlike the D70, but [speculation warning!] not quite as good as the D2 series. For a mixture of landscape and macro, with a bit of event photography thrown in (the latter being all that I've been able to do with it so far), it's everything I could have hoped for, and more.
Sadly, I haven't made any prints from it yet (partly due to not having time to shoot something that I consider worth wasting ink on), but I don't think that the resolution is going to be a problem for anything that the average amateur would want. It is even possible to crop a bit without worries. I anticipate that it will get a lot of use over spring break, and after that time I hope to write something to post to the user-contributed reviews section of the site. :)
My only comparisons are the D1 and the D70, the former which I owned, and the latter which I used several times for several hours each. The D200 is definitely of a professional build, unlike the D70, but [speculation warning!] not quite as good as the D2 series. For a mixture of landscape and macro, with a bit of event photography thrown in (the latter being all that I've been able to do with it so far), it's everything I could have hoped for, and more.
Sadly, I haven't made any prints from it yet (partly due to not having time to shoot something that I consider worth wasting ink on), but I don't think that the resolution is going to be a problem for anything that the average amateur would want. It is even possible to crop a bit without worries. I anticipate that it will get a lot of use over spring break, and after that time I hope to write something to post to the user-contributed reviews section of the site. :)