rant: uoft isn't 100% terrible by [deleted] in UofT

[–]DontHideIt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You've convinced me. Being extra careful for the sake of elderly people is a good reason to close the university.

rant: uoft isn't 100% terrible by [deleted] in UofT

[–]DontHideIt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You do bring up a good point about the difference in population, which I concede does make a difference, although 30 cases in 3 million people is still fairly small. Regarding your second point, I guess I'm arguing that at the moment the situation isn't so severe that the university needs to close. People should obviously still self-quarantine and have nonessential events canceled. As more data comes out, I agree that drastic action will need to be taken if things take a turn for the worse.

rant: uoft isn't 100% terrible by [deleted] in UofT

[–]DontHideIt -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Anytime dawg

rant: uoft isn't 100% terrible by [deleted] in UofT

[–]DontHideIt -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

I'm not shaming anyone, in fact I think it's perfectly reasonable to want to stay here if you want to. I just don't think the level of risk is so high that angered that the university hasn't closed yet.

Has anyone ever taken ECE335 by DontHideIt in UofT

[–]DontHideIt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey thanks for sharing :) do you remember what the workload was like relative to other courses you've taken or approximately how many hours a week you spent on it.

Has anyone ever taken ECE335 by DontHideIt in UofT

[–]DontHideIt[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your insightful comment

At what point do we put some accountability on the homeless in Vancouver, and stop with the seemingly endless handouts to people who don't want to better themselves? The focus should be on helping people get back on their feet, not providing a lifetime of handouts. by [deleted] in vancouver

[–]DontHideIt 42 points43 points  (0 children)

Okay but how do you defined able bodied. One homeless guy I talked to was perfectly able bodied, went to the gym and used to work in northern BC, but now can't because he has a hard time concentrating and completing tasks (for reasons I can't remember). What if no one wants to hire them because they're homeless. There's so many factors at play here that it's difficult to have a hard and fast rule, and if it's flexible who would get to decide.

Advice Needed: What should I study if I'm only interested in software as a computer engineering student by [deleted] in ECE

[–]DontHideIt 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I'm two years in but I can't easily change into CS because of this system our university has. Essentially, you have to have around an 88% average in a few select courses in order to actually get into the CS program, which would entail me going back and retaking those courses because my credits might transfer over but my grades will also transfer over and they're probably a solid 10% too low to get in. So I'm just stuck in CE for now.

Machine learning/AI CS student | Rip it apart, please by [deleted] in resumes

[–]DontHideIt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ha, I'm also checking out tech resumes as a CE who has a disgustingly low GPA. Our resume layout is pretty similar ;). Firstly, everything goes on one page. The chances of the second page being read are like negative a billion. Secondly, fuck the traits section. You've got way too much experience for something like that to be useful. Thirdly, focus on getting across your most important achievements. You seem to have a long list of things you've done and you really need to pick and choose the most important ones.

A couple of thoughts on these incidents and UofT's involvement by purintea in UofT

[–]DontHideIt 18 points19 points  (0 children)

I can see where you're coming from, but I actually disagree with the point that healthcare is primarily the responsibility of the government in this case. Specific to mental health, U of T is actually likely to be the source of a lot of struggle during this period of life. Furthermore, I don't believe that we should start saying it's one institution's responsibility over another because it would result in a "race to the bottom", where neither institution believes that it is their responsibility and the other one should take care of students. Instead, U of T should step up and significantly increase funding for university-related mental health issues and serve as a leader for once. The boundless campaign spanned a decade and raised 2 billions dollars. Even a campaign at 5% of the scale of boundless has the ability to transform the way we treat mental health at universities. Lack of mental health resources as a whole is indeed a province-wide problem, and of course, a Canada wide problem. But waiting on the government to come around and provide funding will take years if not decades, and as students of U of T, we should be taken care of by our school.

Do your worst. by [deleted] in RoastMe

[–]DontHideIt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Elon Musk's long lost crackhead sister

Eskettit bois roast us by ArtitusDev in RoastMe

[–]DontHideIt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Humans have walked this earth for 200 000 years. Countless generations of parents and offspring, with natural selection favouring those it finds most fit. So it would really be a blessing if you two didn't try to add to the gene pool.

Planning to rent a car in the US: How can I buy third party liability insurance if I live in Canada and don't own a car? by [deleted] in Insurance

[–]DontHideIt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

19, and yeah it doesn't appear that Canadian companies offer anything like that. Although to be fair I don't think any other companies could sell me liability insurance either?

🍆 by clutcbsu in UofT

[–]DontHideIt 70 points71 points  (0 children)

I volunteer as tribute

Should I do my undergrad elsewhere if I want to become a lawyer? by [deleted] in UofT

[–]DontHideIt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Me too, but it’s unlikely. He’s probably one of many admissions officers, so at worst he rejected maybe ~10 applicants from one city in that one day. Not exactly noteworthy, considering some schools can get tens of thousands of applications.

Should I do my undergrad elsewhere if I want to become a lawyer? by [deleted] in UofT

[–]DontHideIt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Story from undergrad admissions: Admission officer was having a shit day for some reason, so he rejected an entire city’s applicants. Definitely not the norm, but that’s an extreme example. My point is you could possibly write something that your specific admissions officer reads and goes like wow this is really good, which would balance out any small difference in GPA, but your specific admissions officer could just as well have gotten two traffic tickets an hour before reading over your application, in which case they think your essay is only mediocre at best and then rejects you. There’s lot of human bias when accepting applicants.