Talk:King Mongkut's Institute of Technology Ladkrabang

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Hi Kmitalum

I guess you work in ReCCIT, but I don't think it belongs to faculties and departments. please check their difinitions. thanks —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 172.179.184.43 (talk • contribs).

[edit] Notable faculty and alumni

While it's good to have the article expanded, this section is getting longer than information about the University itself... perhaps trim it down a little, and expand more on the University? --Paul C 21:55, 11 May 2006 (UTC)

I don't think it's a good idea to include the MD of ITV or the professor at low-rank universities into your notable alumni. It will lead western guys to look down to your institute.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by Jackthestriper (talk • contribs) 23:42, 19 May 2006, UTC.


Hi There,

Normally, Notable Alumni means President of the Country (Deputy Speakperson, Parliament Member, etc. are too simple), Nobel Laureates ("National Science Foundation CAREER Award" or "Stephen O. Rice Prize Paper Award" are not worth enough, I guess), Top10 country's richest guys (MD of a company is not enough as well), Nobel-candidated Professors (even Harvard Professors are NOT enough! not to mention tens of professors in the article) etc. Please be careful to edit the page. There is a thin red line between fact and exageration.

Cheers,—The preceding unsigned comment was added by Bluecocacola (talk • contribs) 17:08, 20 May 2006, UTC.


Hello Mr. Kmitlalum, I dont think 'the first to offer PhD, MS, or BS in some specific field' is so important that it should be included in the first paragraph; Kmitl is the first to do so and I think it's weird. If you wanna mention something about that , please write something more relevent like it is the third oldest U or it is the second oldest Engineering school in Thailand, etc.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by Muaythaikick (talk • contribs) 12:58, 21 May 2006, UTC.

Hi Paul; I think this school's name contains grammar error; so funny. No one in the world uses the name like this (King Mongkut's) for example Harvard University, not Harvard's University (Harvard is also a name of a person). It is even so funny that this is its official name he hee.—The preceding unsigned comment was added by Muaythaikick (talk • contribs) 17:57, 21 May 2006, UTC.

Please sign your comments by typing four tildes like this ~~~~
And I don't see how the fact that the naming doesn't use the apostrophe the way other universities do makes it a grammatical error.
On an unrelated note, the fact that a few comments posted to this page are from users with no other contributions makes me somewhat uneasy - I hope no sockpuppetry is going on. --Paul C 02:23, 23 May 2006 (UTC)


Well, it is the only university in the world to do so. I think it should be only "King Mongkut" because I understand that this university is the university in memorial to King Mongkut rather than something that the King owns. Anyway, I am now agree that we should leave it that way as its original website also uses this name. By the way, I don't know what you meant by sockpuppetry.