I took the Engineering GRE three years ago. Towards the end of the exam, I started to see a pattern--using no brain at all, the answers to every question could be reduced to two. Example: a question on a circuit might have the following answers:
a) I = 5 b) I = 3 c) V = 2 d) V = 4 e) V = -2
Right away, you throw out the first minority (a and b). Then the next minority (e). Voila! Your answer is c or d. I swear that more than half of the questions on the test fit this pattern.
This invention really only fits the way Japanese drink beer. In your basic itza-kaya, once your beer is empty, it's expected that a waiter will bring you a new one. If you're done drinking, you leave a little bit in the glass.
I have similar problems myself, but another question comes to mind: while I haven't done it yet, I could see myself using GPL'ed code in my own projects. Doesn't that *require* that my code be GPL'ed as well?
Does our hero's love interest still have an Adam's Apple in the new edition?
I took the Engineering GRE three years ago. Towards the end of the exam, I started to see a pattern--using no brain at all, the answers to every question could be reduced to two. Example: a question on a circuit might have the following answers:
a) I = 5
b) I = 3
c) V = 2
d) V = 4
e) V = -2
Right away, you throw out the first minority (a and b). Then the next minority (e). Voila! Your answer is c or d. I swear that more than half of the questions on the test fit this pattern.
This invention really only fits the way Japanese drink beer. In your basic itza-kaya, once your beer is empty, it's expected that a waiter will bring you a new one. If you're done drinking, you leave a little bit in the glass.
I have similar problems myself, but another question comes to mind: while I haven't done it yet, I could see myself using GPL'ed code in my own projects. Doesn't that *require* that my code be GPL'ed as well?