How To: Take Great Naturally Lit Pictures with Your Point-and-Shoot

5:03 pm on June 28th, 2007 by Kelly Sutton

Hot poop. It’s been awhile since I’ve posted anything. My excuse: I’m in South Korea. What’s your excuse for not getting work done?

On this trip, I find myself taking quite a few pictures–as you would on any trip I suppose. I discovered that the flash is “evil” in the programming sense (i.e. you should only use it when you absolutely need it). Natural light, in almost any photograph, looks much better and the people don’t look like ghosts.

Read on to your heart’s content »

Two Time Wasters

3:11 pm on June 28th, 2007 by Rosario Doriott

If you’re not going for productivity today:

  • Bloxorz shapes your spatial skills. [via DownloadSquad]
  • UpBeat could be called Keyboard Revolution (i.e., similar to Dance Dance Revolution).

I’ve been playing the latter game for a while now, but I am nowhere near any of those high scores.

Kill That Beer Belly!

8:53 am on June 27th, 2007 by Rosario Doriott

SIOnCampus just posted a good article on how to accomplish that and more:

With school in session, we’re all packed in the dorms. We can easily get our posse together for a quick pick-up game of basketball, and we can pester a roommate to spot us at the gym. But when school’s out, and everyone splits up to go home for the summer, this becomes a bit more difficult. But don’t fret. The Internet offers several solutions. And none of them are on MySpace. [SIOnCampus]

Get off the couch: Five ways to get your sport on this summer

Stop Losing Your Numbers: Get Zyb!

7:00 am on June 22nd, 2007 by Rosario Doriott

Way too, too, too many college students either lose their cell phone or get a new one and then advertise to all of Facebook that they’ve lost their contacts. Boo hoo. Have none of them ever heard of Zyb? Now you, loyal HackCollege reader, have.

Zyb is (of course) free. The service will store and keep all your contacts, your calendar, and even those text messages from your lover that you cherish… safe, online, and available 24/7. It supports virtually every mobile phone (even the old ones).

Sign up and follow the directions to sync your phone with the service. You’ll need an Internet connection, but practically all cell phones these days have that capability. If you’ve downloaded ringtones from your phone before, you’re fine.

Zyb will send their “settings” right to your phone, and whenever you remember, you’ll just click “sync” now and then. No need to get on a computer. No need to type in your contacts. Just click “sync” right from your phone, and Zyb will receive all your contacts, calendar, and sms.

This is perfect if you lose your phone, if your phone dies, if your phone stops working (i.e., you spilled liquid on it), or if your phone gets stolen. If you’re abroad this summer, get this service immediately.

How To Build Your Own Air Conditioner

8:53 am on June 21st, 2007 by Rosario Doriott

For those of you in summer school, this idea is surely a godsend.

I know when I took summer school, there was certainly no air conditioning in the dorms, and that was dreadful.

University of Waterloo ‘05 graduate Geoff Milburn explains how and why he decided to build his own air conditioner for under $25:

To avoid dying in the summer of 2005, I built a primitive air conditioner. It’s a basic heat exchanger, using water as the medium.

You’ll need a fan, a large garbage can or cooler, and a trip to Home Depot. Read the directions. [via LifeHacker]

Let us know if any of you try this one out!

Shopping for College: Bedding

7:11 am on June 20th, 2007 by Rosario Doriott

Need a new comforter for next year? RealityBedding delivers twin-size (dorm-size) comforters with females on top, and right now, they’re having a summer sale: Pay only for shipping and handling.

Why not.

Summer Hobbies: Biking

1:38 pm on June 19th, 2007 by Kelly Sutton

The summer is a great time for developing hobbies, like drinking. Not for me though, I’m throwing myself into the realm of biking. I’ve been biking semi-seriously since about January, and that will soon change now that it’s officially summer around the U.S.

If you’re already into biking, then these two links are for you:

  • My friend Garrett left a comment a great comment on the CouchSurfing.com post. He mentioned WarmShowers.com, a site similar to CouchSurfing, except specifically for traveling cyclists. Rock on.
  • Cleaning a bike is very important. I cleaned my yesterday for the first time. (I didn’t have degreaser or Teflon spray in my dorm room. And I was lazy.) I found this great tutorial on cleaning a bike yesterday. I used it and would recommend it.

If you’re looking to get into road/mountain biking this summer, your first stop is probably a swap meet or craigslist. Or I suppose you could always email me, I’d be happy to help.

What are you doing as a summer hobby?

~Kelly

What We’re Reading: June 19, 2007

1:11 pm on June 19th, 2007 by Kelly Sutton

I’ve been back from Germany since Saturday. If you do the math, that amounts to about three days of unproductive ass-sitting. I’ve hardly been keeping up with my Google Reader. Here’s what I have been reading though:

What’s on your summer reading list?

What I’m Reading Lately: Loans and Money

11:05 am on June 16th, 2007 by Chris Lesinski

While prepping to pay for college again, I’ve run into a few interesting student-centric financial articles lately. I thought I’d share the skinny:

Flip Side of the Dream: Having an unusually hard time finding a job this summer? Times columnist Bob Herbert might know why. The article is from TimeSelect, so get access here.

A Math Lesson on College Loans: You know that super-duper no-co-signer Stafford loan you’re using? It’s a federal direct loan — the best thing you can opt for, especially in the midst of recent loan scandals — but what if it could cover more than $3,500?

MyRichUncle: student lender leverages loan scandal: A strange option in the paying-for-college department called a “human capital contract.” Get money for college by signing away a small percentage of your future income for 10-15 years out of college: if you’re the next Bill Gates, they rake in the cash… but if you make nothing, you pay nothing. This older article from the International Herald Tribune got me started.

After Graduation: Check Yourself

7:10 am on June 13th, 2007 by Rosario Doriott

Last year around this time I read an article in the New York Times about graduating senior Tien Nguyen (Note: See BugMeNot for access) who was “smokin’ blunts” on Facebook and “lying his way to the top” on Google.

When a small consulting company in Chicago was looking to hire a summer intern this month, the company’s president went online to check on a promising candidate who had just graduated from the University of Illinois.

At Facebook, a popular social networking site, the executive found the candidate’s Web page with this description of his interests: “smokin’ blunts” (cigars hollowed out and stuffed with marijuana), shooting people and obsessive sex, all described in vivid slang.

It did not matter that the student was clearly posturing. He was done.

“I never really considered that employers would do something like that,” [Nguyen] said. “I thought they would just look at your résumé and grades.”

Yep, this is for reals, kids. Scary stuff. Employers look at your Facebook, and they’ll Google your name. But, not all is lost. Read on for a few tips on (1) Cleaning up your Facebook –or at least making it private and (2) Keeping track of what Google has to say about you.

Read on to your heart’s content »

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