ok, very OT - is it true that there's this one CS teacher who was
caught whacking off in front of his PC during lunch break?

On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 1:10 PM, hard wyrd<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, Jun 9, 2009 at 10:49 AM, Ridvan Lakas ng Bayan S. Baluyos
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> 1. Careful with the Math and Physics Subjects. This might cause you to get
>> delayed for a year or so since most are prerequisites of higher ICS
>> subjects. In my case, I got an AF in Math 6 and I failed in Physics 2.
>
> Never loved these subjects. Never have, never will. Trigo, Algebra are my
> thing.
>
>>
>> 2. Only the basics are taught in the classroom. Be eager to learn what is
>> beyond the four corners of the wall.
>
> True.
>
>> 3. Some teachers are good (even better), some teachers are nothing. And
>> the latter are the ones who usually love to fail students. I really don't
>> get it why they find fulfillment in that.
>
> Very true. They do that to justify their innate insecurities and
> incapabilities. The best teachers urge you on. They dont spoonfed, but they
> show you the right way of doing things (right sensei botp? ) .
>
>> 4. Use your Internet Laboratory Cards wisely. Do research on good stuff
>> that help you in school. I remembered during one term I used up all my hours
>> playing Ganguro Girls and other games in mini-clips.com. Haha.
>
> We didnt have internet before when I was in college. I had to do it at
> Cyberpoint when the net still costed 85 - 100 pesos an hour juggling both
> IRC and reading tech sites.
>
>>
>> 5. Borrow books at the library. There a few good and updated ones (well 2
>> years ago. hehe).
>
> Correct. But also, dont scrimp on really good books - even second hand books
> will do. I still have my old books on Unix, Unixware, C/C++ and Assembly,
> HTML3.5 (15+ years old books!).
>
> And not only books. Buy also old tech magazines. You'll never know the
> treasures that you'll find in them (Dr. Dobbs Journal, etc..)
>
> And most of all, _ask questions_  . Do not pretend that you understand what
> was discussed (para lang ingnon bright, or looking intelligent). What ever
> is not clear, ask about it. It will help out in the long run, and it will
> contribute to your self confidence in being able to talk in front of a lot
> of people, plus being able to voice out your opinions too.
>
>
>
> --
> Part-time SysAd, full-time Dad, part-time netNinja
> CNS, ACFE, FOSS Advocate and Consultant
> Registered Linux User #400165
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>
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Robert Brent P. Lipke
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