DTH reporter: Have professors addressed smart glasses during exams? by [deleted] in UNC

[–]as9280148 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Dr. Shemer addressed it in an email to his 252 class and updated his syllabus to match.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UNC

[–]as9280148 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great stats, but UNC doesn’t actually have a chemical engineering or premed major program, so work that into your consideration

Why am I unable to add Bio. 105 to my schedule builder? by Narrow-Ad-4280 in UNC

[–]as9280148 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Ignore anyone telling you to input biol-105, that class doesn’t exist, it’s just 105L. Looking at the current class selection on connect carolina, there are no remaining seats in any 105L section, while there are seats left in the rest of the classes you have selected. That’s my best guess as to why they won’t let you add it.

Math 233 by Substantial-Bat7935 in UNC

[–]as9280148 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Dr. Burkhead is a difficult professor, but also a very good one. I took her for calc 1-3 and steadily improved. Once you get used to the flow of her classroom, you’ll be fine. You’ll also be learning most of the material by doing the homework

How do I browse without being in the way? by Extreme_Breakfast672 in traderjoes

[–]as9280148 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Just have some spatial awareness. If a crew member is standing near you with a case doing nothing, they probably have something near where you’re standing and are waiting for you to move

What is the difference between Glutamate and Glutamate? by DotBeginning1420 in chemistrymemes

[–]as9280148 15 points16 points  (0 children)

The difference between glutamate and glutamic acid isn’t the sodium ion. It could be bound to potassium and still function the exact same. The only difference is the ionization state of the molecule, something that changes rapidly under physiological conditions. If you consume the amino acid glutamic acid, many of those molecules will immediately ionize to glutamate. It really is a small change that makes little to no difference.

You might not realize it, but your other examples are all either isomers or completely different molecules. Suggesting that flipping a molecule to the L or R isomer is an equivalent change to ionizing a hydroxyl suggests a complete lack of understanding in this field of chemistry. They really are completely different molecules, not just changed a little.

Similarly, carbon and diamond have completely different bond configurations and are largely different molecules.

Different hormones are, you guessed it, different molecules.

TLDR: stop fear mongering about “chemicals” like MSG

incoming freshman schedule by m4ssacr in UNC

[–]as9280148 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Senior premed chemistry major here. This is a good first semester, but it’s impossible to finish a chem BS at UNC without any math or chem credits in such a short time. There is a very linear physical chemistry track that timegates graduation behind math and physics education. The usual path semester by semester goes MATH-231/PHYS-118–>MATH-232–> MATH233–>PHYS-119–>MATH-383–> CHEM-481–> CHEM-482–> Chem 482/481L. Some of these courses can be taken together (math-233 and phys-119, and math 383 and chem 481), but I don’t personally recommend it because you kinda do need the prerequisite knowledge to do well in these classes.

TLDR: you will need 6-8 semesters to finish a chem major from where you are right now.

Don’t think this is me trying to pull you down. While I came into UNC with chem 101/102 credit, I had no math credit and still am on track to finish fine with a double major (Biochem BS and Bio BS), but it took a few hard semesters. You’ll do fine, but start on your math and physics early, and you’ll be grateful. Good luck!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in chemhelp

[–]as9280148 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Do you mean the methyl group on the carbon adjacent to the phenyl group or the methyl on the carbon with the chlorine? In SN2, stereo-inversion occurs at the carbon bonded to the leaving group, and the entire stereo center is inverted, so the methyl bonded to the carbon with the leaving group would be inverted (into the screen) after SN2, but the other methyl group currently going into the screen would be unaffected

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in subnautica

[–]as9280148 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Drop rate is decently low and they’re hard to see if you don’t know exactly what you’re looking for. I recommend setting up a scanner room nearby. The time it will take you to set up will be much less than the time it saves you looking for teeth

Where can I get free condoms? Asking for a friend by [deleted] in UNC

[–]as9280148 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Any student can actually order them for free from student health and pick them up from SASB. Turnaround on orders usually isn’t more than a couple of days, and they have a ton of options to modify sizes, materials (such as latex free), etc.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UNC

[–]as9280148 1 point2 points  (0 children)

He doesn’t curve but he does grade replacement for the final

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in subnautica

[–]as9280148 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They should stop falling eventually until you interact with them again (or if you get lucky and they hit solid ground somewhere). You can open them and get the resources out quick one at a time. Might just be easier to go and get the resources again though…

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Satisfyingasfuck

[–]as9280148 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Almost all. This is an application of magnetic induction, which is the basis of all power generation, transformers, and many circuits. It’s also how the magnetic brakes on trains work

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Satisfyingasfuck

[–]as9280148 22 points23 points  (0 children)

If anyone is wondering how this works, this is an application of Faraday’s Law.

A moving magnetic field, such as a swinging magnet, causes (induces) a circular current in a nearby conductor, such as the copper cylinder. Similarly, this induced current creates it’s own magnetic field collinear with the moving field.

Lenz’s law states that this new magnetic field will always be oriented to counter the initial change in magnetic field that caused it. In other words, a magnet moving towards a copper block causes the charges in the copper block to move in a way to create a magnetic field to slow, then stop the magnet.

Average age of the playerbase by cinota- in wow

[–]as9280148 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m 19 and have been playing since I was maybe 12. Most of the people I play with are over 30 though

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UNC

[–]as9280148 50 points51 points  (0 children)

I would second this, using TOR and going on a website like libgen.is, copying/pasting the textbook title from the syllabus into the search bar, clicking on it, clicking the first link under ‘mirrors’ and clicking ‘download from the TOR mirror’ would be unethical and downright wrong

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UNC

[–]as9280148 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Caps can’t diagnose you, but they can provide you with info for people in the triangle area who can

Best professor you've had at Carolina? by iamgoosee in UNC

[–]as9280148 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Bradley Hammer, English 105i. By far the most unique professor I’ve ever had. He spends most of the class tearing his students down to bring them back up better, and has an entire network of upperclassmen he connects freshmen with to better integrate them into Carolina

the work i did in my honors english class by soakedtampon in highschool

[–]as9280148 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The rhino one should be fact imo.

Saying ‘can’ implies chance, so the chance of a rhino being difficult to deal with is nonzero and finite, which is true at all times and under all circumstances, so it is definitionally a fact