The tassel is the only thing that is orange, the cap and gown is black and the sash is typically UCR colors (blue & gold). You can buy the tassel on amazon. You can purchase a sash from the UCR bookstore.
OP if you need to use your fin aid you can defer your payment to 9/27 since the deadline to pay for Dundee is 9/15 w/o late fees. Just use this link:
Well the resolution recommended here is 1080*1920, so that's what I went with. I also minded the buffer zone so that might have helped.
I honestly don't know what they're looking for because I've had multiple people ask me why theirs didn't get accepted and I have no idea. All I can suggest is to follow the guidelines and hope for the best.
Good luck!
The 16 bus runs from Bannockburn to the Moreno Valley mall. There’s a Best Buy on Day street along the way. Your ride time will be around 40 minutes.
Bus tracker: https://www.rtabus.com/bustime/wireless/html/selectstop.jsp?route=16&direction=WEST
Google maps: maps.google.com
Or Amazon: AmazonBasics Universal 65 Watt Laptop Charger (AC Power Adapter) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01HP2A8G6/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_VuR5Ab4E5Z55S
My bike got stolen all the time before I bought this alarm. Only $17 on Amazon. Totally worth it. Goes off if 2nd movement happens.
Hi all.
For about $20 you can buy lockable quick release skewers for your wheels.
These are near impossible to defeat without the right tools, the thief will give up and go to the next bike. You can also by them for a seatpost.
If you’re like me and a baller on a budget... don’t buy the blue light glasses just download f.lux it changes the temperature of the screen for you as the sun sets and adjusts the brightness. Never had an issue since.
Start a fire, someone gets hurt, you are libel.
You can buy nice flameless candles [a].
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citronella is gonna be your best friend. The make candles, sprays, actual live plants and bracelets. You can find any of these at Walmart, target, and Amazon; I’m sure other stores as well. Here’s a link to a pack on Amazon:
You’ll need a laptop, an audio interface , and a DAW (digital audio interface…basically audio editing software). If you have a MacBook, you can use GarageBand. It’s beginner friendly and already has some amp simulations pre installed.
It really depends on what you want and your skill level, overall I def recommend anything from backfire, an amazing brand, power, comfort, and not super expensive. I have the backfire zealot s. I've been riding longboards for 5 years and this is my first eskate, and its amazing, fast speeds and good charge (about 15 miles). If you aren't experienced then I recommend smth older with less power, don't listen to top speed because their remote lets you have an "eco" mode, which is really just a mode for beginners. If you are really stretched for cash, go on amazon and find the JKING board. If you need anything else I'm happy to answer.
Get a Brita water filter + pitcher! In the middle of the night you’re not going to want to walk into the hall to fill your water up.
The problem with group projects is that most students aren't required to take prerequisite courses in managing group projects and personality assessment. Students are thrown into group projects with no preparation in a sink or swim scenario.
I would suggest independent study of project management anti-patterns, personality assessment including identifying maladaptive personality traits and disorders, and transactional analysis. The meaning of transactional analysis isn't very obvious from its name, but it deals with recognizing common patterns (games) that people tend to use during interaction with others, particularly in reference between people in different power-roles, such as supervisor vs. peer vs. staff/underling etc.
This book on transactional analysis is available for free with Kindle Unlimited.
The whole point of these related subjects is to look at group projects from a meta-perspective to identify common traits of the interaction between the group members. This can give you a much greater ability to see what's really happening in the group and give you social tools to redirect and defuse dysfunctional traits to be more effective in getting a better result, or at least know why it's not working.
First, try connecting it to another display with an hdmi cable to determine if it's just a problem with the screen. If it's just a screen problem and everything else is working fine, I'd recommend buying one of these portable screens to use instead of your macbook's screen https://www.amazon.com/Lasitu-Ultrathin-Ultralight-Portable-Protector/dp/B08F2BWX2V/ref=sr_1_9?crid=2SHF5AODOKIJ3&keywords=portable+monitor+macbook+pro&qid=1651979853&s=electronics&sprefix=portable+monitor+macbook+pro%2Celectronics%2C103&sr=1-9 .
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It's most likely cheaper and faster than getting your screen repaired and works just as fine (you just have to carry around a display with your macbook) Plus it's from amazon so if it doesn't work/you don't like it you can just return it.
Funnily enough Apple eventually had to make an Android app that (should) notify you if you're being airtagged. Not sure how well it works though.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.apple.trackerdetect&hl=en\_US&gl=US
Here's the tracker I recommend: TKStar 4G TK915 model
It has a long battery life and doesn't require any monthly service plan, only a simcard and a cheap data+text service like SpeedTalk or Tello.
Here's an alarm with 2 way remote that will notify the remote when triggered.
(prof here, not student). I am in comp sci, but I know Sang Hee, and I have read her very cool book, which is one of my favorite popular science books of recent years [a]. She is amazing at telling stories to illustrate ideas in anthropology. If I had the time, I would love to take her class.
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[a] https://www.amazon.com/Close-Encounters-Humankind-Paleoanthropologist-Investigates/dp/0393634825
It really depends on what you don't understand in mathematics. From my perspective, ARC35 is ridiculously simple and shouldn't be a problem if you use supplementary material from the internet to gain a better understanding of the math. If you don't know how to graph equations, play around with https://www.desmos.com/calculator and try to learn how to predict the general shape of a function. Also make sure you don't pass/fail ARC35, because it prevents you from taking any further math classes and you would have to change majors if your major requires it.
Never rent furniture, you will end up paying 3 to 5 times the cost.
You can often get great stuff at thrift stores, really cheap.
Other good places to get cheap furniture are https://nextdoor.com/for_sale_and_free/ and craigslist.
If an ipad or tablet is out of your budget, you can get USB drawing tablets for <$50 that allow you to draw out math problems or chemical structures without having to scan anything. Using it with one-note (which you get for free for being a UC student) allows you to type on your notes as well as organize them by classes and into separate quarters and export them directly to pdf. Doesn't help too much for in person classes, but as someone who wasn't in the position to buy a tablet at the beginning of fully online classes, it was genuinely life changing. This was the one I got and after you get used to drawing without looking at your hands it's great for the price.
http://www.ratemyprofessors.com/ShowRatings.jsp?tid=646498
Closest thing I'll find in relation to the professor you're looking for and majors related.
Hope this helps.
Saw this on the public access channel and it seemed to list some pretty cool activities/places... although the website looks horribly designed.
Hopefully you can get some use out of it. Enjoy!
EDIT: Direct Link to PDF
here's the link to libgen:
https://libgen.is/book/index.php?md5=02123D443456D3D6E2EFCC4A7863B533
if it is an epub file, just use an online converter to pdf
Folding@home is basically crowdfunding computer processing power to crunch data to fold proteins. Scientists use this data to better understand diseases related to mistaken protein folding and come up with computational ways to develop new drugs. For a sense of scale, there are like 10^143 ways a 100 amino acid protein can unfold, so there's no way scientists can do this in a timely manner on their own.
If you want to set your computer to prioritize work on covid projects, set your disease preference to "any disease".
Check this out : https://tinychat.com/room/gottastudy (password : getstudying)
It's an amazing community with people all over the world and from different fields (medical, biology, computer science, law ...) the users either share their desktop screen or put camera on to avoid slacking while study periods. and eventually they can chat and help each other during breaks :)
You can buy an ethernet to usb-c or thunderbolt adapter or buy a usb-c hub with ethernet for you mac.
*Download via the Transact Mobile Ordering Apple Link: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/transact-mobile-ordering/id1494719529 Android Link: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.blackboard.mobileorder&hl=en_US
Acer Swift 3 Thin & Light Laptop, 14" Full HD IPS, AMD Ryzen 7 4700U Octa-Core with Radeon Graphics, 8GB LPDDR4, 512GB NVMe SSD, WiFi 6, Backlit KB, Fingerprint Reader, Alexa Built-in, SF314-42-R9YN https://www.amazon.com/dp/B086KKKT15/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_9tetFb7YR5YD5
Acre Swift 3 with ryzen 4700u. This is really cheap for the performance it gives you, I’m planning to sell my shitty MacBook and get this. Think this processor got some light gaming potential as well.
There’s a cheaper alternative that you can buy off of amazon for $15 called the after pill. I found out about it through planned parenthood. Just in case you want to buy it ahead of time for emergencies. Here’s the link to it (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00LWF9AZI)
NordVPN also has a killswitch options so I'm pretty sure it would work just fine. Also your traffic will still be encrypted just like with any other vpn so I don't think you have anything to worry about
ima just leave this here as a suggestion that meets the requirements and in which i think is good for its value. Might be a little heavy to bring to school everyday though (6 pounds)
Don't leave school documents on any computer that can break or be stolen. Upload everything to a private cloud storage site like google docs or google drive with a separate backup vault. Only copies should be on your local computer. Professors aren't very lenient with excuses like those for files that go missing. It's the student's responsibility to have multiple backups of assignments and work.
The question isn't whether to get a laptop or not. The question is whether to buy an expensive gaming laptop instead of gaming desktop, or to get an inexpensive laptop at a good value while having a much better gaming desktop computer. So I'm not arguing against getting a laptop or tablet. I suggest getting a small, thin, laptop with very long battery life as a priority, with no extra expense for gaming capability, and then use the desktop for anything requiring a powerful CPU or GPU. It's a matter of getting the most for your money. Now if a student had an unlimited budget, then sure, an expensive gaming laptop and a top-of the line desktop with overclock Skylake i7-6700K + GTX 1080 would be fine.
Long battery life to last through a full day of classes is really useful because you won't have to carry around the power dongle and cables.
Here's an example: Acer Cloudbook for $219, delivered.
ok. I have a 1200 dollar budget, and I think this is what im gonna do. 700 on an ultrabook with a dedicated gpu, like a 940m, like this https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01EI97J0W/ref=olp_product_details?ie=UTF8&me=
200 on the r9 480 Have my i5 4690k already 50 for a motherboard 50 for 1tb hdd 50 for 8-16 gb ram 50 for 120 gb ssd 100 for mini itx case
The terminal degree for physics is a PhD. Therefore a PhD is a minimum requirement for most jobs in physics research. However, I highly recommend the book A PhD Is Not Enough!: A Guide to Survival in Science for anyone considering a career in the sciences.
A bachelors degree in an ABET accredited CompSci program is usually enough to get hired in entry level positions. A masters degree is the highest degree recognized for career advancement. A PhD is only required for a career in academia or research, which account for a very small percentage of jobs in the software industry. A college degree isn't even required to get hired for programmers who know their stuff, have gained credible experience somehow, and have good references. There's also at least 20 time more jobs related to software development compared to physics. That doesn't necessarily make software a better career choice than physics, since that depend on how well the positions match your personality and skills.
There's also careers that require interdisciplinary skills. There are programmers who do need to know physics well, even though that's a small percentage of the overall market. Even 1% can result in 3,000 possible jobs when the overall market is 300,000 positions.