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Heather :: Friends blog

September 19, 2008

A new semester has started, but the same old story continues. Textbooks still cost too much, and most cost even more than last year. The number of major textbook publishers has gotten lower, meaning an increasingly smaller hegemony of publishers is dictating what we'll use and how much we'll pay.

On the bright side, many classes across the country are looking to more open-sourced solutions. Professor notes, collections of readings, and online resources (like those we feature here at www.College-Cram.com) are taking the place of traditional textbooks in more and more classrooms. Keep up the good work, everyone!

P.S. Here's a shout out to the latest websites that are finding our resources valuable to their visitors, such as SkyLine High, and those incorporating us into their WebCT/Blackboard courses (like the accounting classes at University of Houston and Chippewa Valley Technical College).

Keywords: Blackboard, expensive, fall semester, semester, textbook, textbook prices, WebCT

Posted by Professor Cram | 0 comment(s)

July 08, 2008

I saw the new Pixar movie Wall-E this past weekend, and it was a visual marvel. I've long since stopped really noticing that these animated movies are animated, because the techniques and tools have progressed so far. (Did you even notice the appearance of actual live non-computer-generated footage?)

From a straight movie perspective, it was ok -- certainly not my favorite Pixar movie. But what it lacked in strong actor presence it made up for with educational value. Here are the top seven things I learned about life from watching Wall-E.

** Warning: Potential Spoiler Alert **

  1. Capitalism is bad --  The movie takes place some 700 years after an exodus of humanity from a trashed and poisoned Earth. Presumably, this is the result of the "benign" rule of the BnL corporation. So, the big bad corporation is the cause of the downfall of Earth. (I'm guessing that between the technological requirement of Wall-E and the political requirement of a corporation taking over a united Earth, I'm pegging the exodus at a hundred years or so from now.)
  2. Apple is good -- Talk about product placement, way to go Steve Jobs! From the still functioning 800 year old iPod to the Macintosh startup sound when Wall-E reboots, it's nice to see that the rumors of Apple's imminent demise have been (greatly) exagerated.
  3. People are sheep -- We let the corporation take over the world, we let (helped?) them trash and poison it, and then we let them talk us into running away from the problem. Then, given the "Shangri-La" environment of the Axiom, we devolved into overweight, glowing screen addicted blobs. (Oh wait, that last part isn't really evolution, now that I think about it...)
  4. People are adaptable -- After a seeming lifetime of relative ignorance, the Captain stays up into the night querying the ship's computer (Sigourney Weaver in her finest ship performance since Futurama) about Earth. John and Mary instinctively seize on their new-found freedom once made aware of the "real world" by Wall-E, and sacrificed their own safety to protect a sliding mass of children on the Ledo deck. Seemingly nobody on-ship objects to returning to Earth and starting anew. Yes, people seem to have an inherent attraction to what's fundamentally right and a curiousity about what's around them.
  5. Computers are evil -- The autopilot deviously tried squashing concrete fact in order to maintain its hold on power. (Where have I heard that before?) The repair bots tried to "fix" EVA in a move reminiscent of Nicholson in "One Flew Over the Cookoo's Nest". Hell, EVA tried blowing Wall-E away on several occasions. They just can't be trusted. (Except, of course, for the computer I'm typing this on... heh heh...)
  6. Robots are good -- EVA and Wall-E were just doing their jobs, but realized that there was a new directive worth striving for. The "broken" bots also pitched in to help them achieve that goal, as did the writhing mass of humanity. Ultimately, the bots tried to do what's best for us.
  7. Stuff lasts forever -- Come on, a Rubix Cube, iPod, and Atari 2600 that are still in one piece 800 or more years later? I have a cube that didn't last 5 years in my closet, and who knows where my 2600 is. Still, the idea that our trash is still around hundreds of years later rings true. After all, I've been to New Jersey.
Some of these may seem contradictory, but that's the nature of the future. And of cartoons. So deal with it.

Keywords: capitalism, computers, Disney, economy, environment, Pixar, robots, top ten, Wall-E

Posted by Professor Cram | 0 comment(s)

June 21, 2008

Another semester has come to a close, and with it some (hopefully) better grades.

So what are you doing this summer? If you're like most students, you might benefit from this post I wrote a couple of years ago about how to spend your summer vacation

For me, there's no rest for the wicked... We've enjoyed a doubling of usage in each of the past three semesters, and I aim to keep that trend going for the fall. I'm sitting in the local Starbucks right now, enjoying a too-large coffee and thinking of more cool and useful things to do with College-Cram.

Enjoy your summer!

Posted by Professor Cram | 0 comment(s)

May 15, 2008

Between wrapping up the spring semester and starting my summer "vacation" plans, I changed my profile page to include links to some of the most popular articles I've written over the years.

In case you hadn't seen them all, here they are:

Enjoy these, there are plenty more where they came from.
 

Posted by Professor Cram | 0 comment(s)

May 05, 2008

We get alot of finance and MBA students searching for homework help at our site. Whether the textbook is confusing or the case notes are incomplete or they just need some extra help, we have a bunch of resources to help finance students get the homework help they need:

Posted by Finance | 0 comment(s)

April 11, 2008

No, this isn't about Star Wars. We had some pretty serious thunderstorm activity pass through here early this morning with torrential rains, lightning strikes, tornados, and sporadic wind damage scattered throughout the area. While College-Cram is hosted by a major hosting company, unfortunately that company is located about 30 minutes north of us and was also caught in the same storm front.

The results, as some of you may have noticed, were some intermittent outages all day today.(I believe we were down about an hour total, in about four separate incidents.)

I applaud those of you who braved the elements and stuck with us, including Dzenana looking for Macroeconomics homework help on market equilibrium, and those who even managed to keep a sense of humor.  You're the real storm troopers.

Posted by Professor Cram | 0 comment(s)

February 11, 2008

I can't figure out how you find the break-even quantity with a mixed cost. Here is the problem:

LOST sponsors a 5-day camping trip. LOST provides a $3,000 grant and collects $350 per camper. The program expects 150 campers and the following expenses: Campground fees, $6,500 for 3 days, Transportation fees $3925 with 60 person capacity, Outdoor equipment rental $45 per camper, meals $55 per camper per day. Determine the break-even number of campers.

Can you help?  

Posted by Jessica @ Finance | 3 comment(s)

January 17, 2008

A couple of years ago we translated our Periodic Table into a flash program for your cell phone, and posted it up on the Adobe website for free.

I ran across it this morning while running a Google search, and thought I'd post it here for you. Here is the Periodic Table for the cell phone.

Keywords: cell phone, chemistry, download, free download, pda, periodic table

Posted by Professor Cram | 0 comment(s)

December 14, 2007

Some of you have asked for an easier way to find out the latest buzz on the site -- the most recent blog posts, who's commenting on what, and the newest notebook entries. We've put together a way for you to easily keep up to date.

Just click on these links to get the latest buzz on blog posts, notebook entries, and member logins/communities.

All for you!

Professor Cram 

Posted by Professor Cram | 0 comment(s)

December 04, 2007

Lorna, a UK student taking Spanish, created some vocabulary lists in her Notebook. We took those lists and made her flashcard Cramlets to help her study. (Check out her flashcards under LORNA, and our custom Cramlets under SPANISH.)

Want your own Cramlets to help you study for finals? Create your own Notebook entries and we'll take it from there!

Posted by Professor Cram | 2 comment(s)

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