Rollingstone.com As a fan of music, movies, TV, pop culture, it is difficult to choose my favorite website. In this era, everything is displayed with just clicking. I chose Rollingstone.com, a website that has access to all these things. I was excited when I found a new Rolling Stone magazine in my mailbox every two weeks (depending on the US Postal Service) since I subscribed to this magazine in 1997.
I started coding at the age of ten. I made a website for my favorite video games, wrote tutorials and listed cheat codes - suppose everyone accesses my site right after the site got live. These sites are not very attractive - they contain the same "under construction" GIF and rotating 3D text, which was what other sites owned at that time. I saw the inspiration of these other sites and pulled out what attracted me. "View Source Code" is my textbook - free behind-the-scenes footage for all websites on the internet. I copied and pasted all the code I had never seen before and tweaked it to see what else I can do. Programming is new to me, I am very excited
In 2006, I made my own website. It is not just a bizarre personal autobiography, a picture of my cat, a clumsy short movie I made with my high school boss, and a short playlist of all my favorite music. At that time I was 16 years old. By 2007, Web sites on poorly designed Comic Sans received hundreds of thousands of hits everyday. My website eventually landed on the top ten music of StumbleUpon and a new media site. I found that music is more popular than my cat's picture (although it may not be harmful)
When I worked in the office, I remember what my colleague first introduced to my favorite music listening site Pandora. We shared favorite songs from a personalized music station and helped each other discover new music. This is another experience of music sharing that creates a connection unrelated to work and builds true friendship that lasts until the age of entering and leaving. I went to college to get a degree in music. Many of my classmates are music students. However, when we left the classroom, my music relationship at college was not over. I sing and play in a music group composed of music major and non-music major. The people of my university community formed a barber shop quartet, and we won the university competition for the second consecutive year. Only one of us (I) is majoring in music.