Like many apps, the Driver's License app will probably require access to your SMSes, phone call record, contacts, calendar, location, and photos for no good reason at all. You'll also need to wait in a queue for a few minutes to view your driver's license, but you can use an in-app purchase to skip the line.
I would suggest looking into Olin College of Engineering. It's a small, project-oriented engineering school in Massachusetts. They pay the tuition of each student so the cost only runs around $17.000 a year instead of $50,000 a year.
School Website: http://olin.edu/
Article in IEEE Spectrum on Olin: http://spectrum.ieee.org/may06/3432
Sure, Wikipedia isn't always that credible. But nearly every single major article has references and external links at the end. Wikipedia isn't an appropriate source to cite, but it is a great place to start researching. I like to think of it like a launchpad, not a source.
Schools should not block Wikipedia, but instruct students to take it with a grain of salt and use the information properly.
There's a saying in Michigan: When the auto industry has a hiccup the state has a heart attack.
At this point the auto industry is having a heart attack, the state is in the ICU, and the state treasury is in the coffin... and politicians want to do this?
Like many apps, the Driver's License app will probably require access to your SMSes, phone call record, contacts, calendar, location, and photos for no good reason at all. You'll also need to wait in a queue for a few minutes to view your driver's license, but you can use an in-app purchase to skip the line.
I would suggest looking into Olin College of Engineering. It's a small, project-oriented engineering school in Massachusetts. They pay the tuition of each student so the cost only runs around $17.000 a year instead of $50,000 a year.
School Website: http://olin.edu/
Article in IEEE Spectrum on Olin: http://spectrum.ieee.org/may06/3432
Sure, Wikipedia isn't always that credible. But nearly every single major article has references and external links at the end. Wikipedia isn't an appropriate source to cite, but it is a great place to start researching. I like to think of it like a launchpad, not a source. Schools should not block Wikipedia, but instruct students to take it with a grain of salt and use the information properly.
There's a saying in Michigan: When the auto industry has a hiccup the state has a heart attack.
At this point the auto industry is having a heart attack, the state is in the ICU, and the state treasury is in the coffin... and politicians want to do this?