One of my fave songs of jimi is If six was 9 which I had on vinyl on one of those were 1970s compilations of rock tracks with one band one side, and a different band on the other (usually very good).
However, I'm writing about 5s and 10s.
This year sees the alarming 50th anniversary of my matriculation at Trinity College Cambridge.
It also is the 25th anniversary of being elected as Marconi Professor in The Computer Lab (as it used to be called when I moved here).
LOoking at my academic diary, it looks like it is the 40th anniversary of me teaching undergrads, PhDs and Masters students (begun a few years into working at UCL, where I was between Cambridge and, errr, Cambridge, in what was, at first, the department of computer science and statistics).
It is the 5th anniversary of my playing live and seeing in most open mike and jam sessions at The Artery sessions at the MAP studio Cafe. I suppose it must be about 45 years since we played a session at the Cambridge Folk Festival, and a support gig at Kings College may ball, too. Oh, and Girton Garden Party.
Having an academic career is, of course, full of cycles. The academic year, the degree, promotion processes etc, and of course this leads to generations. I recently met a PhD student who was being advised by someome whose advisor I'd advised - so that's 4 generations. Looking at this (e.g. from the Maths Genealogy Site), it makes sense - stats suggest it is abot 10 years after you finish your own PhD that your own first advisee finishes (n the UK system). Of course, to reach some number of generations, the survival rate (i.e. does a student become an academic (hard), do they get students of their own (quite hard), do those students finish in reasonable time (fairly hard), and rinse, repeat, or recurse, as we prefer)....
I'm still working on figuring out a legitimate Erdos/Bacon/Sabbath number...I've got E (crowcroft :- luby :- noga :- erdos) and S (bit obscure but if you count jamming) but Bacon is a challenge - i was on the same stage as Brian Cox once for a Royal Society AI event at the Royal Festival Hall, so if I can count that, I can inherit his numbers, plus 1.
Gee what fun.
In numbers...:-
60 PhDs supervised
120 PhDs examined
Lost track of masters&undergradute numbers...
237 papers (on orcid)
FRS since 2013. FREng since (space) 1999.
Hot off the press: Cambridge has a retirement policy. This is my last year accordingly. my take.