I have a gym in my work building. I think its slightly subsidized by the company since I pay 40$ a month that comes out pre-tax. Get my own locker and theres laundry service. I think its pretty cheap since I am living in NYC.
objective is not really needed. you can state it in your cover letter.
Can you add quantifiable numbers into your experience bullet points? For example: Assisted Support Team with VOIP deployment which saved 5 man hours...
the IT degree is not the most flexible. an EE degree is the most flexible. Remember, what you study in college doesnt necessarily mean that you have to pursue a career. IT is really for people who cant hack it at ee or cs.
Contrary to popular belief, programming is not hard to learn...
shure is awesome. i use my e2c on my daily commute but they always seem to break after about a year. I send them back to shure and get brand new ones. When I am going to upgrade from my e2c, its definitely going to be a shure.
I remember taking the calc bc test about 4 years ago. the multiple choice was retardly easy and the part 2 was freaking impossible. I dont think i fully answered a part 2 question. I ended up getting a 5 on the test. So don't sweat it.
If you know how to use the ti-89 (which requires you to actually know the math your doing), it can cut down on calculation times dramatically. But usually, for pure math classes, calculators aren't really necessary. But engineering (especially EE) classes usually allow them.
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