I see people texting while driving all the time here. IN NEW JERSEY where there are a million cars, exits, jug handles, people going 95 mph etc.
I see people texting while driving all the time here. IN NEW JERSEY where there are a million cars, exits, jug handles, people going 95 mph etc.
To paraphrase the ruling: the Constitution does not guarantee life, liberty, and the right to be a dick about your stupid beliefs.
Standardized tests are ridiculous. They only test how well you take a test!
Over the years I've built up 15gbs in Dropbox.
A manual. Yes. LOVE my manual transmission!
I don't see the difference with that feed? It still has the "read more..." links.
Buy a solid used car. No car payment EVER.
Now if we could just find a way to have an entire Lifehacker (or Jezebel, or Gawker) article displayed INSIDE my feed reader instead of having to click and go to the website to see the whole thing. Talk about driving up page clicks, people. Does Lifehacker even need to drive up stats?
Simple. A magic eraser. Stainless steel, porcelain, whatever. The best kitchen-sink-cleaning tool in the whole wide world.
Professor Moxie here with a few more tips:
Am I the only one who thinks Moleskine paper SUCKS?
What desktop is that? I love it!
AMAZEBALLS is right. I feel like my life is so much better now.
I'm surprised the 10% rule isn't on here. I learned that rule the hard way. Got very excited that teaching was over for the year, and started running more than usual every week. It feel GREAT to have all that extra running time!
Why? Because the Evernote feature was a part of the free Feedly I signed up for, so it's sort of annoying.
Exactly. Especially since when I tried out Feedly and signed up for it, Evernote WAS baked in there.
I've been pleased with Feedly so far as a Google Reader replacement. But, I'm not thrilled with this "pro" thing.
You sorta HAVE TO shuck it fast when you cook it in the husk— which is definitely the best way to do it.
I was pretty clear in my post that I'd be willing to use this in the classroom INSTEAD OF expensive textbooks. But, I'd only be willing to use it as long as it was up to date and relevant. Disciplines like Sociology change, and I'm not going to use something dated just because it is free.
Huh. I checked out the Intro to Sociology text, since I teach that class all the time, and I was impressed. It was *as good* as any textbook I've seen. It's a good overview of everything, with great sources for more information.