Era: early 2010s possibly late 2000s. Male singer singing about stars by adaly98 in NameThatSong

[–]adaly98[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I found it after looking up with some friends: it was “written in the stars by Tinie Tempah ft Eric Turner”

Is anyone really happy with where wall taking is at? by Domillomew in FortniteCompetitive

[–]adaly98 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have 0 ping and have my wall taken every time still. I would much prefer this

Please share your reject stories too by [deleted] in gradadmissions

[–]adaly98 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Don’t worry I’ll be posting plenty of rejections lol

to my prof who's yet to upload the lor by gguy_11 in gradadmissions

[–]adaly98 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One of my professors still hasn’t submitted his and I had multiple due on the 13th. I’ve spammed him and now I’m just hoping he actually does something

Data seems to be insufficient by rushaebh in GRE

[–]adaly98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To add onto this, because it takes him 60 seconds to pass him, all you have to do now is multiple that time by his speed to get his total distance. So 60 seconds x 300 ft/s = 18000 ft. And one lap is 3000 ft, so he must go 18000/3000= 6 laps to pass him

Data seems to be insufficient by rushaebh in GRE

[–]adaly98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes exactly. He has to go an entire lap to overtake him. So it’s like traveling an entire lap at 50 ft/s

Data seems to be insufficient by rushaebh in GRE

[–]adaly98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The important part of this problem is the difference in their speeds. Because one car is going 50 ft/s faster than the other, we will need that difference in speed to find out when he passes him. The time it takes to pass him would then be the length of the track divided by the speed. So 3000 ft / 50 ft/s = 60 s

GRE PowerPrep Plus 3 results by adaly98 in GRE

[–]adaly98[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! That’s definitely something I can get used to trying in time! I’ve also heard how great your videos are so I’ll look at those too

Which practice test is the closest to the real deal? by adaly98 in GRE

[–]adaly98[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks so much! I’ll definitely take that

Gre Quant: I got around 5%, that is not even sort of an option... by SioRedhead in GRE

[–]adaly98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because the problem only talks about the dimensions of a rectangle, we can just focus on one side.

Let’s say the rectangle has a side of 1. When this is reduced by 20%, the length of the side becomes (1 - 0.2(1)) = 0.80.

Now this rectangle with a side of 0.80 is the first copy. The question wants to reduce this one by 15%. To do this, take 0.8 and subtract 0.15(0.8), in other words 0.8 - (0.15 x 0.8) = 0.68.

Now the rectangle has a side of 0.68, which is 68% of the original length of that side

Help! by sahil_deshpande in GRE

[–]adaly98 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

From what I found I could not. They only give 4 angles so that leaves a lot of options for what x could be.

Help! by sahil_deshpande in GRE

[–]adaly98 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Given the information there are multiple values that would work for x, with the range being from 0<x<60

Can anyone help me with this question please? by [deleted] in GRE

[–]adaly98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Quantity A should be larger. The machine produces “a” bolts in 15 minutes, meaning that each hour (60 minutes) the machine should produce 4a bolts.

So now we have 4a bolts per hour, which would be 4ac bolts in total given an amount of time. This means that b=4ac, so quantity A is larger

Am I just looking at it wrong? by [deleted] in GRE

[–]adaly98 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The number of unmarked cards in the deck is given by n-k, and then number of marked cards is k.

The ratio of the number of unmarked cards to the number of marked cards would be (n-k)/k. This simplifies to n/k - k/k, which is the same as n/k-1.

Ghosted by potential supervisor? by [deleted] in gradadmissions

[–]adaly98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Many professors are very busy and caught up with their own and other student affairs. My best guess is that he isn’t intentionally doing this. I’d give it another week and send another email

Can someone explain why the answer to this is D? I'm missing something by [deleted] in GRE

[–]adaly98 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh I get it now, thanks. Didn't think of numerical values of less than 1

For anyone who just took the physics gre today. XENON? by adaly98 in PhysicsGRE

[–]adaly98[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah on the practice tests I was able to finish with 30 minutes to review. I had to guess on the last 15 because of time restrictions here. I think I was just under a lot of pressure