I'm sort of surprised you're marking college level papers on hard copy in the first place.
How do you mean? I mean, it's the Third World. They weren't even all all printed out--one had a handwritten cover sheet.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I'm sort of surprised you're marking college level papers on hard copy in the first place.
How do you mean? I mean, it's the Third World. They weren't even all all printed out--one had a handwritten cover sheet.
When I got married I found out that all official documents in Louisiana must be filled out in black ink. Our rabbi told us while he helpfully traced over the info in our marriage license application for us, since we had filled it out with the blue pen provided by the Parish clerk.
ION, I might just have pissed off a coworker royally. Thankfully, it doesn't matter because she's in Cleveland.
I took on the responsibility of updating/correcting an big spreadsheet of data--it covers a bunch of property nationwide, and tracks them all on a large number of variables. Except nobody had updated it in a couple of years, and some of the data for my region was wrong. So I asked, and the folks at HQ said, "Go for it!" and I started fixing it all up--corrected the macros, fixed the errors, resorted it so it made sense, added new things to sort on (they had some things coded by color, so you couldn't even sort it automatically, so stupid).
But I've run out of data to check it against, so I sent email to a woman in Cleveland asking for her spreadsheet of data on this type of property. Because she has to have one, right? I mean, I have like four, all for different purposes. It's a bit too much to keep all of that in your head.
She gave me some bullshit answer that someone at HQ had the master spreadsheet, but that's just the one I am fixing.
So I emailed her back, asking if she does, in fact, actually track this stuff, or does she manage the information in some other way.
And I'm quite sure the answer is that she doesn't track this stuff at all. Which I will be sure to share with my boss: this is why they need me to be in charge nationwide. Not that they will ever do it...
Yeah theres the disney thing and then mj nutballs and occupy tents and gang members in the elevator trying to be intimidating but failing.
How do you mean?
College level, I guess I assumed everyone would submit stuff electronically.
I prefer marking hard copy, like I said. I just thought it was going away. It has in much of publishing.
and then mj nutballs
I want this to be the name of a rap artist. A white rapper with cornrows.
I'm sort of surprised you're marking college level papers on hard copy in the first place.
My graduate program teachers almost all require hard copy so they can mark it up. My current teacher is the only one I've had so far, however, who doesn't do emailed copy at all; he doesn't even check his email more than once a week or so. Of course, he's the oldest teacher I've had so far--he's actually retired a few times, but just can't stop teaching.
Maybe bieber can be mj nutballs. He was denied entry into a cipher for asking ludacris to write his rhyme. I lold
I feel academically smug. I ran a few test Lattice Multiplication problems next to the basic multi-digit multiplication format that I learned (1's, 10's, 100's, etc.). Everything was hunky dory until I hit one where I got wildly divergent numbers, so I went for the calculator to see which one was right. And the Lattice one was right, so I spent several minutes analyzing where I went wrong and discovered a fundamental bit that I'd forgotten over the years.
Thereby illustrating what the video was saying about it being a less muck-up-able method than the other way.
I be smart! No, wait, I be trying hard!
I'm gonna read smutty fic now.
By the time I finished my MLIS most of my comments were given electronically.
It's a requirement to fly with a black pen now? That's not in the documentation I got.
I think the customs declaration forms bet. US/Canada state blue or black pen.