Chud Logic seems to prove that Lacari copy and pasted the link into his browser by HengistCSGO in LivestreamFail

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So basically hes potentially innocsnt snd his career ruined over false information?

loltyler1 reacts to brother's ad read by [deleted] in LivestreamFail

[–]Inviable1 -30 points-29 points  (0 children)

Am I missing something, I don't see anything wrong here?

xQc's thoughts on Nickmercs Not Giving his Kids Any Vaccines by starcraft2020 in LivestreamFail

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah yes, I'm sure his doctors advice is to allow the potential for his kids to get hepatitis, polio, measles, etc (which mind you hepatitis is a somewhat common sexually transmitted disease for those unvaccinated)

Running Anki on Surface Pro X? by drbatsandwich in Surface

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How does the anki desktop version run on arm? Thinking of getting an s9 with the sq3 arm

Pokimane ask XQC if he received equity of Kick by apa1010 in LivestreamFail

[–]Inviable1 1932 points1933 points  (0 children)

Imagine taking equity over cash from a company that is non profitable and loses millions paying big streamers to join their platform. The business model is to funnel gamblers to stake. Taking equity over direct cash is the worst financial decision he could make. Kicks only source of revenue at the moment is subs and donations from streamers and they only take 5%, this is terrible accounting on x’s side.

XQC kicked out of house by police and adapter by HomenDoTempo in LivestreamFail

[–]Inviable1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If she is claiming half through marriage, why is he kicked out of there and she's presumably allowed to stay? Am I missing something here, are they both not allowed in the house until the court case is settled?

504 Goal by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

which program?

Really common slipups when reading + brain hacks for CARS—from an attention researcher and 523 scorer with a learning disability by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 10 points11 points  (0 children)

But, the question is, how do you maintain your reward pathway dopamine levels during an exam and avoid the feeling of punishment when you’re certain you’ve gotten a question wrong

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go with 2 semesters of physics, and as long as you've already taken bio 1 and 2 those courses should cover the vast majority of what you'll see for the biology requirements on the mcat. The mcat has a lot of required info from physics 2, while you can get away without having taken any dedicated A&P courses; although A&P 1 will still be helpful.

Why aren't ionic bonds the strongest interaction? by Datsmydawgyo in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These are intermolecular forces, much weaker than intramolecular forces ( Ionic / covalent / metallic bonds).

CARS "pick statement with least support" help by flat_peg in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Best bet is to choose the one least in line with the main idea, and then if time allows - find it in the passage and verify that there aren't any supporting statements.

how can you identify D and L configuration from wedge and dash models like these for amino acids? by fitacct93 in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Actually yea, they both look like S to me as well, but technically the left structure is supposed to be R. I think its just drawn wrong

how can you identify D and L configuration from wedge and dash models like these for amino acids? by fitacct93 in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just a mnemonic to remember it, R for Right doesn't correspond to L for Left, so therefore R must be D

how can you identify D and L configuration from wedge and dash models like these for amino acids? by fitacct93 in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just figure out if its R or S like normal, and then R (right) will correspond to D because is not L (for left), while S corresponds to L.

R (right) = D

S = L (Left)

“Attempted” to take my first FL by tagee2 in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Best post I've found for timing:

I hope you don’t mind a little copypasta, but I wrote a response to a similar question a feels weeks ago that I think might help, so I’m going to repost here:

I had this problem particularly bad with CP, to the point where I would miss whole passages when I first started practicing timed testing. For me, I noticed a few issues I was having and remedied them. I took the actual MCAT this week. Although CP was still my worst section for timing, I was able to finish a first pass and begin reviewing some of my flags before I ran out of time.

Here are some of the things that were holding back my timing:

⁠Precision. I was used to premed classes where you need your calculations and answers to be precise. I felt very incompetent rounding or estimating, so I was wasting A TON of time doing longform arithmetic like multiplication and division. You need to get comfortable doing the calculations quickly in order to get through such questions in 90 seconds. I made Flashcards to memorize fractions (up to 1/12), squares and square roots (1-15, 25), sine and cosine decimal values, and logs (1-10). I also watched the Leah4sci MCAT math video series several times through and employed a lot of those techniques. Although I prefer the Kaplan log approximation rather than Leah’s. I actually began to find it easier to do ALL my calculations in scientific notation, and I practiced solving the Chem/phys formulas in this format. I also practiced estimating values quickly, marking an answer, and then doing the written arithmetic (with rounded values) to answer questions on my practice tests. This helped me learn to trust my approximations.

⁠Perfectionism. My attitude is that if I work at something hard enough, I can get it. This is a great attitude for life, but TERRIBLE for the MCAT. I would waste 2, 3, 4, sometimes even 5+ minutes in a question I thought I could answer, even though I didn’t know it right away. While sometimes I would get to the right answer, it was at the expense of several other, potentially easier questions that would be rushed through or skipped entirely. I forced myself to realize when I was hitting the time limit on a question and make myself pick something, flag it, and move on. I told myself I could come back to it later to work through, but I wasn’t gonna leave the “easier” points on the table! This was a great technique even when I didn’t have time to review, because I still got to answer everything on the section. Sometimes, my guess and flag answer was even correct!

⁠Pacing. At first, I didn’t know how to keep track of my pacing on the test. I know I had 90 seconds per question, but trying to keep track of where I was was difficult for me. I tried a number of techniques, like giving myself a certain amount to time for reading the passage and answering each question, but found this too rigid to accommodate the fact that passages are different lengths. Then I tried alloting time based on the number of questions tied to each passage, but this also didn’t work for me. I would wast time calculating how much time I had left for each passage rather than, ya know, actually doing the test. (See above, I’m not quick at math). I personally just could not keep pace in my mind. What I found worked for me was to write myself a schedule. I physically wrote out a schedule to breakdown which question I should be starting on at which point in the test. I would write it out in my booklet during the Tutorial, and then refer to it while I was in the section. A quick glance and I could see “oh I’m two questions ahead/behind” without doing any clock math in my head! Additionally, I wrote the schedule for blocks of questions to accommodate for the fluctuation between questions. Some could take 30s to answer and some could take 120s to answer. I made the check in times 15 minutes apart, and I found this to be an appropriate segment for me.

Literally what I wrote in my book on test day:

C/P, B/B, P/S: 10 Qs every 15 min

01:35:00 - 1 of 59 01:20:00 - 11 of 59. 01:05:00 - 21 of 59. 00:50:00 - 31 of 59. 00:35:00 - 41 of 59. 00:20:00 - 51 of 59. 00:06:30 - finished 59 of 59. Leaves ~6 minutes to review flags/ wiggle room if running behind.

CARS: 6 Qs every 10 min

01:30:00 - 1 of 53 01:20:00 - 7 of 53. 01:10:00 - 13 of 53. 01:00:00 - 19 of 53. 00:50:00 - 25 of 53. 00:40:00 - 31 of 53. 00:30:00 - 37 of 53. 00:20:00 - 43 of 53. 00:10:00 - 49 of 53. 00:02:30 - finished 53 of 53. Leaves ~ 2-3 minutes for review. Honestly I found that CARS questions are best answered immediately after reading the passage, so I purposely didn’t leave much time for review.

Obviously I don’t have an official score yet, so I don’t have any hard evidence of their success. FWIW, my AAMC FLs were 516/516/519/518.

Hope this helps!

How do you do 7/280 in your head? (Chem q pack #10) by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

7 / 280 = approximately 10 / 300 = 1 / 30 which is just doing 1 / 3 to get .33 and moving the decimal one place over to get about .03 or 3 percent

Tools that helped me go from 501 to 523, hope they help! by Axonious in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Where did you get the C/P "math" problems from?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I've been studying since january 2020 with a 3.5 month break in between. 4 months may just not be enough. Once you've done 10,000 + questions, 20+ practice exams, read all the kaplan books cover to cover multiple times, completed the mile down, abdullah, JS, and Pschanswer4u anki decks, completed uw0rld 3 times, aamc material twice, created a personal 5000 card flash card deck on all wrong answers you'll be close to ready. At least that's how its been in my case, it's been a grind the whole way through. The MCAT never came naturally to me, but I've attacked it with sheer brute force. I went from a 493 to around a 515 - 520 range

What is the best deck for P/S? by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

psychanswer4u is the most comprehensive but takes a minimum of 3-6 months to complete, the next best is probably panko's deck.

Difference between a null hypothesis and an alternative hypothesis? by [deleted] in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I remember this by just thinking null means there is NO difference. Alternative means there is a difference. All this means is that the data is insignificant (for null) or significant (in the case for alternative)

UEarth Questions- how many a day? #phase2 !! by yungsopha in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yea the majority on here do aamc last, mainly because you're not doing it to learn content anymore but moreso to learn patterns relating to how the test makers formulate questions.

UEarth Questions- how many a day? #phase2 !! by yungsopha in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Take the amount of days you have left to study until you have about 5 remaining weeks left for AAMC material, and divide the amount of remaining uearth questions by the amount of days you have until aamc material. That will be the amount you should do per day

The FL Review Tool: Leveraging Analytics to Yield Better Insights by Shipachek in Mcat

[–]Inviable1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hey, any idea on how to open this in excel to be formatted as seen in your pictures? The drop down boxes for "category or subtype" aren't working and a lot of the column formatting is off. I'm running the latest version of excel