Just looked it up a bit more... I have tried using Tunnelbear, NordVPN, Open-VPN, and the standard Windows VPN Service (all of which are authorized according to this list.) None of them work to access my asu unless I log in with them first, then get into canvas, THEN I can use it while on canvas.
Here y'all go! $15 for a shirt. Basically if 20 of these are sold in 10 days you'll be charged and orders will be sent.
I didn't create the image in the post. Since there was interest in a shirt I decided to recreate it.
Check it out: https://teespring.com/make-arizona-great-again
Be content! It'll give you a higher chance of seeing familiar faces and making friends. In high school you know everyone, at ASU you'll be just another face in a sea of people. It's a bit overwhelming, but you'll really be able to get away from all of the drama and focus on yourself.
Make sure to use ratemyprofessor in the future for all classes you are able to pick.
Calliss teaching 110? Dear god what a disaster. She's so jaded and bitchy and really cannot get her point across on anything. Honestly, I'd take it at MCC with Mike. He's a fucking incredible teacher and you will learn a lot.
If you can't find anything better something like https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.audio.hearing.visualization.accessibility.scribe&hl=en_US "Google Live Transcribe" might help. This would require watching your phone and playing the video in real time though. There probably are better solutions which can do it faster (at say 100 times the speed) and save the results in a text file or such.
Do not take Filer. Do. Not. Look at this ratings
The only way to pass the class is to go to tutoring or the private tutor that will start spamming emails a couple of weeks before the exam.
I liked his lectures. i did. The guy was funny and reminded me of Gunny. He always had hilarious stories and really interesting concepts (Like how money tender went from a barter system, to a gold system, to banks). His lectures are usually word for word for what he says.
The problem is, he teaches the concepts, but not the method.
Imagine going to a calculus class and only being taught proofs. Now, you are expected to do some derivatives and integrals. Just because you saw the proof doesn't mean that you know how to do it.
There was little to no practice in the entire course. There were homeworks due every 2 weeks or so, and an exam every 6 weeks or so. If you messed up once, it was really hard to recover.
I don't know why this class was so hard. I really don't. If he said to study questions 5-10 in the homework, you could bet that the questions would show up again. His final was 90% of the other exams you had, but slightly changed. Instead of finding X, you had to get Y.
Overall, his classes felt like the big weed-out classes. Maybe it was tougher for me because I wasn't a business major and I didn't know some of the stuff that other students know, but I saw the majority of the class suffer.
On the good side, his curves are ridiculous. Like 20% ridiculous. He also lets you drop the lowest of 4 (maybe 5?) exams, so you can completely skip the last 4 weeks of class if you are happy with your grade and want to skip the final.
I’ve never heard of the speedtest website you’re trying to reach and I’m not sure why you aren’t just using a normal speedtest to check internet speeds?
Also, you don’t even need to use a “speedtest” to check your download speeds, you can go into “Network Connections” in your control panel and check the status of any network you’re connected to, although it’s less accurate than a time based speed test.
In my personal experience University towers had pretty decent WiFi and Ethernet when I lived there a few years ago (not the best I’ve had but far from the worst).
I've had a few friends that took him for Calc III. One got a C, and one got a B. He's supposed to be one of the worst professors for 267 so I'd suggest you switch out, since there are still open classes. (Knutson at 7:30 is worth it, I'd say.)
Reference: http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=1846169
DON'T DO IT! http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=1919570
I took it myself, these are all true reviews about the class. It was literally the worst class ever with Affolter. I feel bad for him because he is a new teacher but his class sucks. You will literally fail all of your discussion boards even if you post an essay worth of discussion. He will take points off for the absolute worst and indescribable ways. From the looks of it, everyone else is also having problems with his discussion boards too. The DB takes up a good percentage of your grade too which is probably one of the dumbest things I have ever seen. Getting 90's on the exams and still getting by with a C because of his class set up.
Whoa! I'm surprised I'm the first person to mention this: Try 30 days of code or some other similar online learning course over the summer, and then go into 100/205 if you still wish to.
https://www.hackerrank.com/domains/tutorials/30-days-of-code
I think that hackerrank course was more thorough than my 110 and half of my 205 course combined. You'll also save yourself 8 months of uncertainty. You may love it or hate it, may as well find out in a few weeks rather than several months.
Lost and found for the tempe campus is at the MU, I'd ask at the info desk too for the library. Unfortunately those receivers are small enough that I wouldn't bet on anyone picking it up.
If it was one of the "unifying" models, you can buy replacements of just the receiver. They're $9 on amazon
Torrenting on campus if extremely risky. The university monitors that shit. However if you get a VPN, you'll be safe. I recommend one called Private Internet Access. I used to have them and they are like $6 a month I believe. Their download speeds are pretty good as well. It's tricky setting up the VPN, but there are online tutorials to help.
From the fitness website:
>Downtown Phoenix campus
Lincoln Family YMCA (Google Maps)
Regular Hours
Monday – Friday: 5 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Saturday: 7 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Sunday: 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.
Here’s the email for the academic advisor I got when looking to switch my major:
I know this might not be exactly what you’re looking for but if you need to schedule an appointment with them, here’s the link! https://calendly.com/ccjadvising
I'm in the same course, it looks like Dumkrieger is a PHD student teaching the course.
If you look at the staff on blackboard, you'll see that Linda Chattin is also running the course. Most of the material that has been posted is from Chattin's course. So I would expect the course to flow in the same manner. Looking at Rate My Professor, I'd say that's a good thing.
TLDR: PHD student teaching it, but follows a curriculum that is rated pretty well.
Applied Ethics with Dr Yoshikawa..
2 -3 hours of study per week will get you through the class with an A. Everything is in the study guide for the test and the test is 20 multiple choice questions. I took it online so I don't know about in person. But her RMP reviews are perfect.
Sure, but on the ASU WiFi everyone gets a different public IP from the IP blocks that ASU has from ARIN. I'm guessing due to this limitation every computer is unable to get a public IP and they seem to have shared IPs disabled.
Here's the list of all CIDR blocks owned by ASU: https://ipinfo.io/AS2900
Again, I'm just saying that for some reason the DHCP takes *ages* to assign an IP to a computer on the network and that's what preventing everyone from connecting. Now the reason why it takes so long, I don't know but this is what my guess would be.
Wow, I didn't know this. That's sad :/ CS is such a fantastic field.
As 89oo5 says, though, if you're really just out to learn programming (which is a wonderfully useful skill btw) take a few CIS courses or something. Install Linux on a home machine, take a look at some tutorials online. Project Euler is a great source of small, math related programming tasks to practice on.
Get used to ALWAYS writing the units with the numbers. Also I found knowing and using Mathmatica or Maxima made my life infinitely easier.
For the lab, take IEE 380 (or learn basic statistics)
Get yourself this pepper spray. If someone is walking close behind you spray it behind yourself and get to safety. It will create a fog that they will most likely walk through if close enough.
FYI Fox pepper spray is the best shit. Hands down. They will be in pain if this stuff gets in their eyes/face/mouth
I saw a lot of water delivery. I’d say you’d want it - but you can also get a cheap water pump for the jugs and go to someplace like frys and fill up jugs as well. I got this battery operated pump on amazon Water Bottle Pump 5 Gallon Water bottle dispenser USB Charging Automatic Drinking Water Pump Portable Electric Water Dispenser Water Bottle Switch (White)
Be aware that some stops have multiple bus lines going through, so it's best to work out in advance which bus you need.
Based on my experience, when you're at one of those stops with multiple buses lines (you can tell because the bus stop sign lists all the buses that stop there), you're going to want to wave at the driver so that they stop there for you. Otherwise, they'll assume you want one of the other buses and just drive right by you.
If there's only a single bus line for that stop, though, then you're fine just standing at the stop, since they're the only one you'd be waiting for.
I'd also like to recommend the Transit app. You can plan a trip, and if you use the "Go" feature, you can (sometimes) even see the last reported location of the bus you're waiting for. It's not perfect, but it's way better than the official app. (I believe there's an iPhone version, too, if you need it).
Also, I would highly recommend showing up five minutes ahead of the scheduled bus time. Sometimes they're early, and while they're supposed to wait to get back on schedule every few stops, they don't always do this. ��
>Cormen, T. H., Leiserson, C. E., and Rivest, R. L., C. Stein, Introduction to Algorithms, The MIT Press, 3rd edition, 200x.
Took it last semester. Book is alright, if you really want to prepare read about Big O and do exercises online for the Master Method.
The book is a good supplement to the lectures, however in my class we never had any assignments or activities taken directly from it. My class used the CLRS "Introduction to Algorithms" 3rd edition. Very popular book. Like someone else mentioned, you could get a head start on asymptotic notation/asymptotic analysis, asymptotic analysis of basic sorting algorithms, recursive trees, master method. Those are all things we did very early on. Good luck!
>•WPC 301 Business Forum with Gonzaga-Johnson 1.Never Eat Alone, Expanded & Updated 2.So Good They Can't Ignore You
Absolutely required - the midterm and the final are based on the books.
>•LES 305 Business Law&Ethics for Mgrs with Sanford 1.Legal Environment Today
Required.
I can't answer you on the rest of the books because I did all of my lower class courses at community.
If you like philosophy, consider PHI/HPS 314 Philosophy of Science with Creath. It's a great course, there is zero homework through the whole semester except reading 2.5 books, and they're very easy reads (and one of the books is just excellent anyways, Weiner's The Beak of the Finch). There are 3 tests, which, if you do the reading and just come to lectures most of the time, you'll do fine on them. Creath is a great lecturer, the material is interesting, the reading is good, and it's an upper division HU.
If you're Barrett there's also a discussion component course you can take (HON 394 topic) to get honors credit for the class, and all you do in it is sit around with Creath and a few other students and discuss additional topics.
Do you and your kitten a solid and get an auto-feeder https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B09CPJB36T
and a gravity water station https://smile.amazon.com/PetSafe-Healthy-Station-System-Stainless/dp/B002RT8M84
Best two things you can get for your cat. This way you never have to worry about not being home at feeding time, can be gone for many days in a row, and it great for helping maintain a healthy weight on the cat.
Someone kept stealing our floor mat where I lived, so I had my cousin 3d print me a holder that just held it on the outside of the door and secured on the inside.
It seems they also sell them for relatively cheap, so it may be an option. Similar to this one.
As much as I love kitties, that one is going to cost you. If the couch is already damaged, they will charge both of you upon check out. I would show your roommate the damage and get a couple hundred now with a written agreement between the two of you that you will use the money to pay the damages and refund your roommate whatever isn't charged.
If the couch isn't too damaged already, you can try the below:
Honestly if you don't need the actual graphing function, I personally prefer the TI-36x pro. As an engineering student, it can be used on all exams including the FE and will never run out of batteries. It also only costs ~$20: https://smile.amazon.com/Texas-Instruments-Engineering-Scientific-Calculator/dp/B004NBZB2Y/ (amazon smile donates a portion of your purchase to the charity of your choice)
For those considering this as more than a meme:
If you do, go for a solid skill trade like electrician, mechanic, or IT. The systems you work on will archaic as fuck, but you’ll establish a good technical foundation.
It’s difficult to manage, but log your hours to work toward journeyman and do industry certifications. You can get a bachelors covered while active duty then use your GI Bill for a masters. Don’t blow your paychecks on materialism and contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan.
I’d also recommend reading up on mindfulness and psychology before heading in, as it will help you deal with the bs. I’d recommend it in normal life, but seeing this is a commitment you can only quit by failing a drug test or suiciding yourself, you’re gonna want your head on straight. “The Lost Art of Compassion” is an easy starting point.
Thank you so much for your insight. You’re completely right. I just have to work hard in class and out.
Is this calculator a good one? Is it one of the ones that you think would be banned when taking an exam?
/u/BRADical_Dude I got the gold laces and they look pretty good. They're a bit brighter than the suede, but match the rest of the gold really well. I have them double laced with the off white laces.
https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B07H8D5923
I used those in 07 Golden. I went with 63" since that's what the shoes come with, but you could go shorts depending on how you like to lace things up.
My first bike this year got stolen within 10 days despute a decent lock and being behind three layers of keycard access. If you get a really good bike lock *the NY STD lock should do the trick and I'd recommend also using a chain to secure the wheels to the frame. It's a little bit if a hastle but you get used to it.
There's a bunch on Celestian on RateMyProfessor. I almost took GLG 101 with him too and I'm so grateful I didn't, his reviews are notoriously awful and apparently this class is supposed to be super hard for a 100 level class.
Here's his RMP: http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=1150454
If you're expecting to go into a class like sociology and not discuss politics because it might hurt some people's feelings, you may be in the wrong place. The professor should be staying objective in her grading, and the students should be approaching the class with an open mind. You'll likely have some heated, but worthwhile and thought-provoking discussions in this class, and you'll most likely also experience people whose opinions can't be changed no matter what evidence they're presented with. Usually what the professor wants to see is intelligent, well-argued points and respect more than anything else, along with meeting the requirements of the assignments, of course.
Based on what I'm seeing on RateMyProfessors, this sounds like it's going to be an interesting class with an engaged professor.
You can typically pirate them or find them online through kinda sketchy services. I used privacy.com to generate burner debit cards and use them to buy text books online through the random websites that come up when you google the isbn. Which ones do you need? Most freshmen level classes either don't need them too much or you can find online just due to the sheer amount of people taking the classes.
Took her last semester.
Here's what she gave us in regards to old exams. I think they were from the semester prior to mine.
If you really want to understand Calc, I simply cannot recommend Dr. Adamson enough. He teaches at CGCC, they have pretty good tutors there as well (I previously worked as a Bio/Chem tutor there, so I am a little biased) That being said, his classes fill up within minutes of opening. He teaches Calc I, II, III and DifEq. http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=219758
http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=1833939 I dropped his class because his class sounds like hell, drop and switch if you can. He literally has one of the lowest ratemyprofessor scores lol good luck! and did you look into any iCourse math classes for MAT 265 instead?
When I posted this question, they listed each of the professors teaching it as having their own lecture, but now they've for some reason combined three of them into one lecture. I've never seen this before, but the teachers that are available other than Abraham are, Christos Katsanos and Tsafrir Leket-Mor.
Judging by their ratemyprofessors scores, they don't seem like great teachers that would be helpful for someone who is not extremely proficient at biology.
Here are their ratemyprofessor scores:
Link to Anbar's Rate my Prof (SES106)
Link to Reed's Rate my Prof (ASM 104)
Both look like they leave a little to be desired.
Edit: Formatting
That's not legal. It's piracy. Not only could ASU or your ISP shut down your internet, but you could be sued by the copyright owners. If you like watching something, you should subscribe to it. If companies can't make money, they don't make content. YouTube TV is a great service and a good deal if you'd rather not break the law: https://tv.youtube.com/
The better language to learn is the one you will stick with. Dabble with both until you find what you like. They are both closely related to each other and are not that distant from English either, so there is not too much to say about difficulty. In terms of usefulness, Spanish wins hands down in most of the US. Fortunately, common languages can be studied for free. Duolingo (especially the desktop website) can be a good icebreaker for both languages. Once you know the basics, Clozemaster offers really good practice in picking up vocabulary. Both websites use automated voices so it is helpful to consume other media or meet native speakers as well.
The Cortina Spanish and French textbooks with audio can be found for free here under public domain courses. The website also offers dated versions of courses from the Foreign Service Institute and the Defense Language Institute. The latter can be mind-numbingly boring but still effective.
Hi- it is great to hear of responsible humans being cognizant of the pandemic and reaching out to help others. We are certain that this step will go a long way in helping the distressed students, especially given the uncertainty of the situation. And while you are assisting them- do check out Weava. We believe the tool will help you and the students in organizing your research. Weava is essentially a tool that enables you to highlight from different digital interfaces/documents, annotate on these pages and organize your findings under folders and subfolders. This will help you order and plan the research process. Here is the link to the extension https://www.weavatools.com/. Feel free to share amongst your circles if you find it useful and all the best in your endeavours.
I'm taking MAT241at Rio Salado which is the equivalency to MAT270. I'm learning the concepts with brilliant.org's multvariable calculus course and an udemy course. The questions are pretty easy and the go at your own pace thing is nice. The grades are heavily weighted on your mid term and final. They make up 78% of your overall grade.
The thing is though, because you need to authenticate to asu_encrypted with your asu username/pass, unless you set your phone/computer to verify the certificate of the authentication server (which my phone for example doesn't do by default), you are going to give whoever pretends to be asu_encrypted you asu credentials.
Therefore, it would be easy to go to a bar out of the reach of asu_encrypted, prentend to be asu_encrypted, and start taking down usernames/passwords of phones trying to connect.
One way to avoid that is to simply use the asu network and try to stay on https sites, most websites support it, most phone apps communicate using https and there really isn't any reason for a site not to support it. I recommend the https everywhere browser plugin (https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere%20).
https://www.designwizard.com/blog/best-laptop-for-graphic-design
Essentially any laptop with a good amount of RAM (at least 16GB) and a fast processor will work.
Honestly, as a CS major, one of the most important (if not the only) resource you’ll ever need is Google. Trends in CS shift really quickly and the only way you’ll stay at the forefront of it all is if you know how to effectively google.
You could start by checking out the StackOverflow Developer survey ( https://insights.stackoverflow.com/survey/2019 ) They do a yearly survey of tons of developers and looking at the popular languages/frameworks used can help you choose which to learn for yourself.
If you’re new, I’d recommend either JavaScript or Python, as these are very high level languages with a lot of community support and documentation, as well as being really easy to pick up. For your app, you could write it in ElectronJS ( https://electronjs.org/ ), which allows you to write something akin to a website, which you also wanted to do, but distribute it for offline use across all major operating systems. In this case you would just need to learn HTML, JS, and CSS.
If you wanted to use Python, you could use PyQT, which is a Python binding of a C++ GUI library, although this will be way more intensive.
If you’re into Java, I’d look at JavaFX and Scenebuilder
In any case, I would recommend to use Google to try and find libraries created by people beforehand, as there really is no reason to constantly reinvent the wheel. GL!
Have you taken any programming classes yet? It's extremely important to know what you're doing before using "the best"
Edit: Also, you probably already know this, but just in case you don't, intellij has a community version for free, it's not even necessary to be a student. For their C Lion (C/C++) IDE, you DO have to be a student (or buy it). Visual Studio has a community version for free as well.
Just make a bunch of fake email addresses and send out referral invitations and get some points. If you are willing to sit there and do this for hours (like me since I have nothing to do sometimes) then you can get a lot of points.
You can use this website, among others, to generate some temporary email addresses and send out invites to get some points.
You make a good point. This actually has been studied by the U.S. Army. In WWII, the number of soldiers who were actually willing to pull the trigger to kill the enemy was very small, maybe one third or so. The Army had to change their training, and by the Vietnam war, the number was about 60 percent, and by the Gulf War it reached high 90's. What was the change? Thousands of repetitions firing against a moving target to make firing instinctive. No thinking. As soon as you detect the threat, draw your weapon, aim and pull the trigger. I went through Army training where they briefed us on this. There is also a good book on it, called "On Killing..." : https://www.amazon.com/Killing-Psychological-Cost-Learning-Society/dp/0316040932
I find that very strange. I was able to have a Google Home Mini, but I had difficulty connecting it to Wifi. Instead, I bought the adapter below so I could plug it in via ethernet. That worked great and I did so after getting assistance from housing and tech support. It would surprise me if their policies have changed.
The main issue they have with speakers like this is that they screw up wifi sometimes. If you connect it via internet and were quiet about it, I don't see how they would find out or why they would care.
Google Mini Adapter
https://store.google.com/us/product/chromecast\_ethernet\_adapter\_gen\_2?hl=en-US
It looks like you can do an Alexa ethernet adapter like this.
https://www.amazon.com/Ethernet-Adapter-Generation-Internet-Connection/dp/B08219CQXK
This one is close enough for pictures/virtual graduation.
https://www.amazon.com/Organic-Chemistry-As-Second-Language/dp/1119110661
​
Best Ochem book ever. I took Ochem from the author back in the day.
100 feet was more than enough, I even wrapped it around the door frame so it stayed out of everyone’s way. Here’s a link to the one that I bought here. Though real talk make sure to talk to your roommates first and make sure they’re cool with it.
We don’t know the circumstances, but I will say: never invite someone you don’t know back to your place on a first date—and don’t go to his. Yes, this is more challenging during a pandemic, but soon the weather will be nice and you can hangout at a park, or with a friend.
Take things slow. Earn the trust! Always trust your instincts, and fight back when your life depends on it!
Also, I recommend every woman to carry this (at all times)—Sabre is great brand for pepper spray:
https://www.amazon.com/SABRE-Red-Pepper-Gel-Strength/dp/B004NKSPR8?ref_=ast_sto_dp
I just use one like this but not bright green lol
As a CSE graduate and current SW engineer, I can say a lot of this you will come to learn over time. However one great concept that's good to get familiar with early on especially if you want to be heavily into software design and architecture is design patterns. This is something I didn't learn until after graduation but this book is pretty much the gold standard on them: Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software https://www.amazon.com/dp/0201633612/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_1dy.DbCCENDN3 .
Good to have for reference all the time.
Just get a cheap webcam. This is the one I used for 3 years: https://www.amazon.com/Logitech-960-000585-HD-Webcam-C310/dp/B003LVZO8S/ref=sr_1_9?crid=2MK1BSM9QO7CA&keywords=logitech+webcam&qid=1562811042&s=gateway&sprefix=logi%2Caps%2C141&sr=8-9
​
It's very straightforward and every course has a "practice" exam that has you go through the motions. Just don't try to cheat because you think you can get away with it since it's setup like this! I have been in classes with people that got caught and they take it very seriously.
Use a VPN. I currently live in Cholla, and I get about 80mb/s down. It's insane. I recommend ProXPN. It's not free, but, they don't limit your download speeds. Plus, the VPN gives you added security so you have a very slim chance of being caught.
TurningPoint mobile responding app.
If the clicker App is not mentioned in your class syllabus, then you might not want to go that route as your professor will yell at you for having your phone out. My professor (Fey) was fine with it and using the app was nice.
Rent on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Scientific-American-Environmental-Science-Changing/dp/1319059627/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1534444719&sr=8-1-fkmr0&keywords=environmental+science+for+a+changing+world+3rd+edition Not sure who you are taking with, but you do need it for Bavousett. Quiz answers are straight out of the book.
I had the same soc class a year ago and you can't find it online because she wrote her own textbook. Unfortunately you do need the textbook because the quizzes come straight out of the text so your best bet is renting it used at the ASU bookstore.
The other class you can get the Kindle (digital version) for like $54 if that's in your price range. Or you can rent it on Amazon (physical copy) for like $20. It's a version older but I can't imagine it's super different
https://www.amazon.com/Crime-Control-America-What-Works/dp/0133495485
Wow that's crazy.. The check-out period for books is only a few hours? Does that only apply to textbooks? I will need books like Tao Te Ching, The Art of War and other books that are more like regular reading books than textbook. Maybe they will have a 7 days check-out period? Have you taken CHM 114? If yes, do you know if I will need to use mastering chemistry on the first day? I'm thinking about waiting till the first day to ask the professor too. However, I don't know if I should get the access code in advance in case I need it on the first day.
> ACC 241 Uses of Accounting Info II with Dallmus Managerial Accounting Pkg for ASU
Required.
> ECN 212 Microeconomic Principles with Filer BNDL: ACP MICROECONOMICS - ASU
Not required, but helpful if you want to pass the class. Practice problems are the same as the exams/ homework.
> LES 305 Business Law&Ethics for Mgrs with Sanford Legal Environment Today
Required.
> WPC 301 Business Forum with Gonzaga-Johnson Never Eat Alone, Expanded & Updated So Good They Can't Ignore You
Required
The other classes do not know. I recommend that you go to class the first two or three classes and then look at the syllabus to see if you really need the books. I wasted nearly $600 on my first semester by buying all the books. None of them were required, and I lost nearly $300 when selling them back.
6 feet, 240 pounds, not skinny, not athletic, a bit more on the fat side but have more than average muscle.
I'm buying either this drop down 41" board or this normal cruiser at 44" from the bicycle cellar right nearby since I don't have the money for a more expensive longboard for now and if I reallly end up enjoying and needing it I'll trade up later.
What do you think would be better for me? I know I'll be hitting a ton of cracks going from Brickyard and back since there's way more sidewalks next to the outer streets.
Or should I actually go search for a really cheap board and replace the bearings myself? I'd rather have the board sooner rather than later.
Do you have any parking near you? And are you selling this for $65?: Ten Toes Board Emporium Zed Bamboo Longboard Skateboard Cruiser, 44", Aqua Fishtail https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01L6V7J1E/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_J96Ozb1EPM2FM
Currently it looks like buying online is within my range, so I can't spin the wheels. Do you know if this would do?: Ten Toes Board Emporium Zed Bamboo Longboard Skateboard Cruiser, 44", Aqua Fishtail https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01L6V7J1E/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_J96Ozb1EPM2FM
Actually here is a 14$ cut no tip required
Buy hair clippers and cut your own hair. The first couple of times you are going to mess it up. But the ROI is pretty impressive on these bad boys.
Serious: carry high speed projectile hair spray, their wings stick together and they cannot fly for a bit, and you won't get stung My preference: Got2B Glued Spiking Glue https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000142OC2/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_808Syb63ZZ2JP
When I took it, it was all Java. I think the class was a struggle for those that didn't already have some experience with Java because of the pace. I recommend picking up this book and going through it before the course if possible; https://www.amazon.com/Java-Beginners-Guide-Herbert-Schildt/dp/0071809252. Work through the exercises (especially the stack and queue ones).
The book we used in the course was called Java Foundations and is something you'll also need. It has a broader focus than just Java, there are Software Engineering concepts mixed in that you won't get from the Oracle book. https://www.amazon.com/Java-Foundations-John-Lewis-ebook/dp/B00BFFGK12 It's not my favorite book in the world but it's not terrible. You'll need it for things like basic asymptotic complexity analysis and the more in depth descriptions of certain data structures, algorithms, and term definitions.
The excuse that the state government isn't paying is a common one, but it isn't true:
Student loans and other forms of "financial aid" are the reason that the cost of higher education continues to increase.
The law of supply and demand is irrevocable.
Imagine the government created this amazing new program to help people buy cars. Anyone looking to buy a car could apply for grants that would give them tons of money. If the grants were not enough to pay for a car, then the government would issue low-interest loans, regardless of credit history, to just about anyone. Not just small loans either, but vast sums. Anyone could get these grants and loans, but the money could ONLY be spent to purchase a car.
Very quickly the cost of a Hyundai Accent would top $80,000.
This is what has happened with higher education over the past several decades. The only difference is that the increase has been more gradual because the government's efforts to "help" grew slowly.
Every time the government tries to "help" some more, schools just raise their tuition accordingly:
Now schools like ASU are "non-profit," but that ultimately only means that there are no stockholders getting dividends. It does not mean that the people running ASU are averse to having more money to play with at work.
If you're thinking to yourself that government efforts to "help" people go to college sound a lot like their efforts to "help" people get mortgages, you're right.
Whether it be houses, or education, or any other good or service, the moment the government decides it wants to "help" people purchase it, prices are going to start increasing. The more "help" is given, the higher the costs will be.
I don't know if your package contains only a custom book or if its a custom book with some sort of online homework access code.
As far as the book is concernced, the book which you will also use in 266 & 267 is almost identical to Essential Calculus: Early Transcendentals 2nd Edition by James Stewart and is basically a comprised version of calculus, early transcendentals 7 ed by James Stewart (atleast this is how it was when I took MAT 265-267 classes).
You can find the 5th edition of early transcendentals by James Stewart which is the same as the 7th for 10 bucks used at
You can see how the class goes and see whether or not you need it.
Go visit the professor prior to the start of class and see if the professor can help. They may be able to help point you to a solution.
Is it this one? The ISBN number you gave is 12 digits and most now use the 13 digit format. http://www.amazon.com/The-World-History-Volume-Edition/dp/0136061486
I take my old texts and give them to my previous profs with the caveat that they give them to a student 'in need'.
I had a 7' 3/8" thick kryptonite cable which I used to intertwine around my frame, wheels and bike rack. As for the lock I used a brinks brand heavy duty combination. The bike was taken between 4:30-6:30pm so it was dark by the time I got out. This is the new lock I ordered:
Kryptonite Kryptolok Series 2 Standard Bicycle U-Lock with Transit FlexFrame Bracket (4-inch x 9-inch) with 4-Foot Flex Cable https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005YPK8G2/ref=cm_sw_r_awd_GWXYub19WFP1C https://www.amazon.com/dp/B005YPK8G2/ref=cm_sw_r_awd_GWXYub19WFP1C
Why not ask Dr. Santos?
If you are interested in kinematics I would look-up Dr. Davidson and ask him if he has suggestions. He is now retired but used to teach a Robotics Kinematics class (MAE). He also wrote this and has been working with kinematics and robotics for decades.
Latex is a great option if you're not allergic. It's cheap, feels like memory foam and is resistant to bed bugs. http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0099X7MDM/ref=oh_details_o02_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1