Quiet here
-
Luke’s godmother’s mother was in the building. She didn’t die in the blast, but 6 months later from all the shit she inhaled.
-
@Copper said in Quiet here:
@Horace said in Quiet here:
They have interesting systems these days.
That is a challenge.
It seems like there must be some holes in that system.
They need some of those glasses like Tom Cruise has where the guy in the truck can see everything that Tom sees.
Oh, it would be easy to cheat, even with their precautions. I am sure some students do. Could just flip the keyboard and monitor to a hidden laptop, and use online tools to solve the integrals and derivatives. They provide the whole step by step solution, not just an answer, so the scratch paper will still look good. The webcam can't see your monitor.
-
@LuFins-Dad said in Quiet here:
Luke’s godmother’s mother was in the building. She didn’t die in the blast, but 6 months later from all the shit she inhaled.
I vividly remember driving thru Indiana the day McVeigh was executed. AMF.
-
@kluurs said in Quiet here:
@jon-nyc said in Quiet here:
I don’t know. I haven’t tested for anything. Cough, fever, sniffles.
Same symptoms here. I'll do the Covid test tomorrow.
And? I was Covid negative last night.
-
Good news and bad news about my test score. I got a 95, because the professor is reasonable with the partial credit. In a five point problem, if you made a calculator error at the final step, you only lose one point. This is how I scraped by with the 95. Bad news is that the whole class did well, with a median score of 89, so the time limit apparently wasn't an issue for very many people. I'll have to recalibrate how fast I go on these exams.
-
@Horace said in Quiet here:
if you made a calculator error at the final step, you only lose one point. This is how I scraped by with the 95.
That is good. It proves that you know "how" to do the problem. That is more important than getting the right answer buy not understanding how you got it.
-
-
I think I told this story once before. In high school calc, our teacher liked to give power tests - essentially tests that could not be completed in the time provided. Calculators hadn't been invented at that point in time. When we got to integral calculus I did the test but failed to add "+C", C being the constant. He deducted a point for every question. Next power test - I went through all 70 questions and wrote "+C" before starting any calculations. He have me partial credit for them - of course, that sparked some disdain from the rest of the class. The instructor assured us this was the last time he would allow that gambit. From my perspective, karma and equilibrium had been restored to my personal universe.
-
@jon-nyc Actually come to think of it, that website can't do solids of revolution problems where you have to set up the integral and solve it rather than solve a given integral. It would be interesting how the AIs would do on those. Could try a slightly complicated one like "the volume of the solid of revolution about y=7 of the region between y=x^2 and y=x".
-
@kluurs said in Quiet here:
I think I told this story once before. In high school calc, our teacher liked to give power tests - essentially tests that could not be completed in the time provided. Calculators hadn't been invented at that point in time. When we got to integral calculus I did the test but failed to add "+C", C being the constant. He deducted a point for every question. Next power test - I went through all 70 questions and wrote "+C" before starting any calculations. He have me partial credit for them - of course, that sparked some disdain from the rest of the class. The instructor assured us this was the last time he would allow that gambit. From my perspective, karma and equilibrium had been restored to my personal universe.
That's well gamed. And the teacher accepted his loss gracefully.
-
Compare this Saturday’s active threads vs last week’s…
-
@LuFins-Dad said in Quiet here:
Compare this Saturday’s active threads vs last week’s…
Nobody ever said this would be easy.
But maybe we could ask Mr. Musk if he could take a moment and cut a few threads.