Then came high school, and he began studying music composition and he played the saxophone. He even attended the Interlochen Center for the Arts playing the saxophone for two summers while he was in high school. Larry said he felt that his education in music helped his impatience and obsession in computing. "In some sense I feel like music training led to the high-speed legacy of Google for me," Larry noted. "If you think about it from a music point of view, if you’re a percussionist, you hit something, it’s got to happen in milliseconds, fractions of a second". He graduated from high school in nineteen ninety-one, enrolling in the University of Michigan, where his father had learnt. While at the University of Michigan, Larry created a functional inkjet printer built of Lego after he theorized that it would be cheaper to print large posters with inkjet cartridges. He reverse-engineered the cartridges and built the parts and electronic systems to operate it. Years passed and Larry Page graduated with a Bachelor of Science in computer engineering from the University of Michigan. He then transferred to Stanford for his PhD course. He chose to enroll