I sure as hell thought so in eigth grade algebra.
Eighth-grade algebra is nothing. Try eleventh-grade calculus and trigonometry.
*passes the aspirin in sympathy*
I sure as hell thought so in eigth grade algebra.
Try post-grad advanced calculus...Eighth-grade algebra is nothing. Try eleventh-grade calculus and trigonometry.
*passes the aspirin in sympathy*
Try post-grad advanced calculus...
I did calculus as part of my electrical engineering studies. 40 years later I still have a headache from it.
For the most part stuff these days isn't even designed to come apart, let alone be upgradable. How could they sell you next year's model if it were?take computers apart, put them back together again, and upgrade my hardware. (But I'm sure most kids nowadays can do that... right??)![]()
Cars are the worse. I can't even change the headlight bulb without taking half the front end off. And they stick the oil filters where you can't reach them too.stuff these days isn't even designed to come apart
No more "shade-tree" mechanics. There's money for dealerships in making their services mandatory.Cars are the worse. I can't even change the headlight bulb without taking half the front end off. And they stick the oil filters where you can't reach them too.
That's the nice thing about a BA in philosophy --it's never obsolete. But as for financial value, well, there are more things in this world than are dreamt of in our philosophy, Horatio,No, thanks. My twelfth-grade trig and calc was headache-inducing enough for me.
I guess that's why I did something easier for my bachelor's degree: programming and project management. (And it was obsolete within a year. Ah, university education. You just can't beat it, can you).
I didn't do calculus, but I had to keep track of (and translate between) binary, octal and Hexadecimal code, without a calculator.
For an encore, I did a graduate diploma in network engineering (early-mid noughties). It's 20 years later and most of it's long obsolete, but I can still take computers apart, put them back together again, and upgrade my hardware. (But I'm sure most kids nowadays can do that... right??)
*twirls a screwdriver* ;-P
Eighth-grade algebra is nothing. Try eleventh-grade calculus and trigonometry.
Try post-grad advanced calculus...
I did calculus as part of my electrical engineering studies.
No, thanks. My twelfth-grade trig and calc was headache-inducing enough for me.
I got through differential calculus, but integral calc was my downfall.Try post-grad advanced calculus...
Cars are the worse. I can't even change the headlight bulb without taking half the front end off. And they stick the oil filters where you can't reach them too.
Yes, solving for X can reveal many great truths. I got this from the Car Talk guys:There's a wonderful indulgence in solving for x ....
When I indulge, I look for really good strawberry ice cream.There's a wonderful indulgence in solving for x ....
Cars are the worse. I can't even change the headlight bulb without taking half the front end off. And they stick the oil filters where you can't reach them too.
No more "shade-tree" mechanics. There's money for dealerships in making their services mandatory.
There's a wonderful indulgence in solving for x ....
In Australia you can take it to any qualified mechanic, a thing dealers hate you knowing. Is this not the case in other lands? 'Dealer serviced' means they gave it to some apprentice to practise on.
Tom and Ray Magliozzi,
Yeah thats what I meant - we call it a 'log book service' - having to take a ford to a ford dealer for example, is bullshit. The only reason we have ours done is to keep the thing under warranty. It's just an oil change and a bit of tyre kicking, really. In Australia you take it where you want so long the place is authorised as a mechanic.I think that it depends on whether the car is in warranty or not. At least her in California, you can take your car to any garage you trust if it's out of warranty. In other states, I think that the dealers have the right to void the warranty if you car is serviced outside their network.
Tom and Ray Magliozzi, the famous "Car Talk" brothers, claimed that they learned about auto repair "in the traditional way, by making mistakes on other people's cars."