My friend and I were flipping cars in high school, bought a $700 e36 325i. Serpentine belt snapped on Highway, so we left it at a gas station in Indy and walked to NAPA (30 mins)
My friend and I were flipping cars in high school, bought a $700 e36 325i. Serpentine belt snapped on Highway, so we left it at a gas station in Indy and walked to NAPA (30 mins)
At least they can locate the driver. Good thing it wasn't a cab or metro
so outside of Russia we swallow sinkholes? I don't think the joke fits.
Didn't know this was happening until I stumbled upon it walking home from class. My weekend just got so much more exciting.
the analogy fits here because using the fast way (cliff notes or the app) really doesn't teach you anything. And kids won't use it rationally because they actually care about theireducation. Have you ever taught kids? Of course you haven't or you wouldn't believe that's the case. The app is helpful for solving…
Get Lou Malnati's buttercrust deep dish then you'll understand this is the proper way to pizza
That's exactly what the book and class is for! It shows you step by step and then you apply it to practice problems. You are forced to make and remake the connections over and over again. The app doesn't force that connection at all, because you can just use it on the next problem.
Here's the difference between a book walking you through a problem and the app. The book gives examples, with other numbers. You have to apply these to the problem. That's how we learn to problem solve. The app does none of that. You don't learn anything, just copy it down.
. The app shows you step by step how to reach the answer. So teachers that require it will still get the flawless, step by step, answers.
You missed my point. I have no doubt a 10 year old could use an iPhone better than the majority of adults 40+. I'm saying they're not going to have the same math skills if they don't do homework regularly. Think about it, if you were ten and had this app, you wouldn't actually think through your homework. You'd do it…
My pound puppy mutt of 16 years just passed away. So true, the most loving dogs there are.
My parents didn't let me have a cell phone until I got a job at 16. If this was out ten years ago, I'd be the dumbest kid in my middle school.
No. It has to do with conflicts of interest now that Mercedes is launching a car that could "potentially" compete with the Model S and future smaller Tesla "In some demographics".
Wow, I used to buy and sell cars off Craigslist all the time. This is scary. He was just another college kid doing what we do to get by and some psycho decides his life is worth a couple of grand. What a completely fucked society we live in.
You've obviously never driven the autobahn. It's not well maintained. It's narrow, usually no shoulder to speak of and the pavement is often much rougher than in the US. The Italian Autostrada and Spanish highways are impeccably well maintained... But then again Germany didn't suffer from the construction boom and…
350z. After growing up thinking these cars were the absolute shit, I was severely disappointed when I finally got to drive one last year.
It took me a second but then I swallowed my gum laughing. Your wit has pleased my dorky sense of humour.
Touché.
My first BMW. A '97 540i Sport 6 speed. I thought all BMWs were overrated, unreliable, overpriced poseur cars. I only bought the 540i because I had $4000k and didn't want to go to college without a car. So I bought the fastest one I could fine.
I bought my E39 M5 for $10k. With $5k, I could add an ESS supercharger and taller rear diff. I think that could touch 200