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I am interested in doing a master’s in mathematics. Which is better, Chandigarh University, LPU or Chitkara University?

In My view after reviewing these Universities. I will recommend you to join Chandigarh University. Here are some reasons:-Chandigarh University is NAAC A+ accredited University. Which means your degree have much more value than the degree from others.Chandigarh University organise many Tours to explore new things.Semester Exchange facility is awesome.CU helps you in research and patent without any cost.National and International conferences are organised regularly.Often Expert Talk seminars by International and National Experts like professors from IITs.Industrial Visits, Workshops, Summer Training etc.And most importantly Chandigarh University is Student Centered.And this only a small description it offers many facilities like CUSAT scholorships, MOOCS(Online Courses to enhance the skills), Co curricular activities, internships all over the world.Trust me once visit and explore the university and you will not regret on your choice.Thank you and Good Luck

What is it like to live in Warsaw, Poland?

I'm currently in Warsaw on a mini-vacation before a conference (my second time here since 2012), so I figured that I'd write an answer to this question for my 200th answer on Quora. :)My experiences with Warsaw are colored by the fact that I was a foreign exchange student, and an Asian foreign exchange student at that. This means that my own experiences are going to be very different from the many foreigners who have made this city their permanent home, and even more so from the native Warszawiacy (Varsovians) who were born and raised here. At the same time, my experiences with the city are very unusual for a foreign exchange student, and that's what this answer is going to talk about.I seriously loved living in Warsaw. I always have and I probably always will. Otherwise, it would make no sense for me to come back every year since 2014, and for as long as I'm relatively close to this city, I will always come back come hell or high water.There were four reasons why I decided to go to Warsaw for school, and I will use two of those four reasons to explain why I decided to come here and how I lived my life in this city.1. It is cheap.As in seriously: for a major European city, Warsaw is cheap. This may change as Poland gets wealthier and the country eventually joins the euro, but for now it's still cheap.The cost of living here is affordable. Varsovians generally say that everything in Berlin is five times more expensive than in Warsaw, more or less. That's generally true: at the Hauptbahnhof before I left for my current visit here, I had chicken phad thai and a lassi at an Asian restaurant on the ground floor. The cost? €10 (40 zł). In Warsaw, that same amount of money would get me a similar but larger plate of chicken phad thai at Du-za Mi-ha (18 zł), water (3 zł) and a nice ice cream cone on Nowy Świat (4 zł), plus I'd still have 15 zł left over.As an Erasmus Mundus scholar, you get a monthly stipend of €1000 to spend on your living expenses, school expenses and whatever you like. When converted to złotych, this is around 4000-4100 zł depending on the exchange rate. In a country where the monthly minimum wage is 1680 zł, making 2.5 times that amount allows you to live relatively comfortably. I lived on the sixth floor of Dom Studencki nr 2 "Żwirek" (Student House no. 2) of the University of Warsaw, sharing a room with a cracked linoleum floor but paying only around 400 zł (€100). Sure, it's an old Communist-era building, but it made do.​Food is affordable. In fact, it was so affordable to eat out that I rarely had to cook at home. I could go to a bar mleczny and come home full for less than 10 zł. The times that I did cook at home or at a friend's place were reserved for experimenting with my own cooking skills or me cooking Filipino food for friends, as I did when I celebrated my 21st birthday at my friend's dorm (Student House no. 4).​Transportation is affordable. For only 140 zł (€35) every three months, you have a transport pass that is valid on all city bus and tram lines, the Warsaw Metro, the Szybka Kolej Miejska (SKM), the Warszawska Kolej Dojazdowa (WKD) and all Koleje Mazowieckie (KM) trains within city limits. Even if you buy a full-fare pass (280 zł/€70), it's still affordable given how comprehensive the city's public transport is: 200 bus lines, 25 tram lines, two metro lines and three commuter rail networks, plus several night bus lines. They could use more frequency though, especially on weekends.All in all, I only spent half of my stipend on living expenses. The remaining half I spent on other things, mostly travel. That pales in comparison with the others in my program who went to Germany or France or Italy, where they spent nearly everything on living expenses and not much else.2. It is not Western EuropeOne thing that you should remember about living here is that this is not Western Europe. This effectively means two things:Don't expect the city to have all the things that define Western Europe, good and badDon't expect people here to have all the attitudes of Western Europeans, good and badHowever, the thrill of it not being Western Europe was precisely one of the reasons why I chose to come here instead. Seriously, Western Europe is quite boring and de rigueur for exchange students, so why not try something new?Compared to Paris or London or even Berlin, Warsaw is still underdeveloped in many ways. Public transport, while comprehensive, doesn't go everywhere and can be inefficient especially if you're going between two places not in the city center. Traffic is a problem downtown during rush hour, not helped by the lack of a proper ring road (something that won't be done until 2018 at the earliest) and, as of writing, the closure of a major bridge due to fire damage. Many parts of the city, especially those parts less frequented by tourists, are still run down, and crime can still be a problem. The tap water tastes bad, so everyone drinks bottled watter. The city is, in many ways, not really Third World poor, but not exceedingly wealthy by First World standards either.However, Warsaw is a vibrant, changing place, and it's true that when you leave one day and return some time later, you'll notice that the city is very different from what it was when you left it. Change defines this city, and it's this frenetic energy that has given it such an allure. The reconstruction of ul. Świętokrzyska from the construction site that it was when I was here is absolutely wonderful, as is the long-awaited new metro line along its path. (This is at Nowy Świat and Świętokrzyska; the metro station is Nowy Świat-Uniwersytet.)There are now proper bike lanes in many parts of this city, as well as an actual bike sharing system. (Too bad Veturilo has poor coverage in Praga, on the eastern side—rumor has it that the bikes were frequently stolen, so the city stopped deploying more bicycle stations in that part of the city.)​Fast Pendolinos now wait at the platforms of Warszawa Centralna to go elsewhere where before these would be staid Communist-era carriages.​The list goes on and on. It's a city that has reconciled its past with its present and the promise of a better future, and I really loved that about this city and how people are, despite all the mistakes that have happened and despite the politics of this country, still hopeful.That being said, some changes are for the worse. For one, when I was living here there were no Romani (Gypsy) beggars on the streets. Now they're scattered all over the Stare Miasto and parts of Śródmieście. Who would've known this would happen in three years?Beyond the city's appearance though, Warsaw is friendly, and the people here are nice particularly if you're an obvious foreigner speaking Polish, or at least making the effort to. Unlike other countries, where natives scoff at foreigners' use of their language, here they embrace it wholeheartedly, and if you try, they'll embrace you in return.It's also a city where you can easily make local friends (and you don't really need to speak the language to do so, but it helps), beer and karaoke microphone in tow. (These happen to be local students of the University of Warsaw's international relations program, though they're the first students under the English-language version of this program.)​There's a place on virtually every corner where you can go out and have a drink with friends—Nowy Świat alone has a lot of hidden hole-in-the-wall pubs and bars that are teeming with people every night. If you're so inclined, you can easily bar-hop the whole night, and a lot of people do that here. The restaurant culture is strong and there are now so many places to eat that if you were to ask me, it could possibly rival Manila (known for its variety of restaurants) a few years down the road. Or, better yet, why not go down to the banks of the Vistula and enjoy a beer with the beavers?​If I want a day alone, I can go to one of the many parks in the city—forty percent of Warsaw is covered in green space. My favorite has to be Łazienki Park, though Pole Mokotowskie and the Park Wilanowski (the park around the Wilanów Palace) are very strong contenders.​For a major city, Warsaw is oddly relaxed. It has everything that you need to stay busy, and people do move at a faster pace here than in other parts of Poland, but it never really seemed to have that brisk pace of life that defines the great cities of the world. Here people still value their time and they treasure it, even if work and family have to be thrown in.AfterwordSo what then is it really like to live in Warsaw?Living in Warsaw is absolutely wonderful. I get the best of both worlds: Western sophistication and Eastern humility, Western amenities at Eastern prices, and a city firmly steeped in tradition and defined by its recent past, but secure in its future in Europe.It's a city full of friendly people, with a bustling street culture and all I could ever want in a major city, having grown up in one myself. But I love how people here take things one day at a time.It has a long way to go before it realizes its full potential, but it's getting there. I wouldn't want it any other way.

How is HKUST for Indians?

I had quite a lot of Indian friends when I was in HKUST. Here are things they liked and disliked about HKUST.Pros:Magnificent view of the South China sea (our campus has a ‘million dollar view’)Cricket training on a football-sized field on Saturday mornings (but need to wake up at 7am yikes)Celebrating holi on the beach (even other international and exchange students joined in. This is organised by the South Asian Student Society)Cons:a bit secluded (HKUST is far away from the city center and this becomes a problem especially for those who want to go clubbing or to pubslack of vegetarian options (quite a few of my friends who were vegetarian started to secretly eat meat when joining HKUST because of lack of options. This was in 2013/2014. Now, there is MUCH more variety including a Punjabi aunty giving veg tiffins for dinnercompetition (we use relative grading, also known as ‘grading on the bell curve’ and so a lot of people talk about the ‘mean’ and ‘standard deviation’. HKUST mentality is very grade-oriented, although I wish they would consider sports and societies too. Most Indians having done CBSE are quite competent so should not struggle in the Maths/Physics courses)

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