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Genomic Repairman

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Posts posted by Genomic Repairman

  1. Quick question: what do you use for making figured on your Mac? I have one as well and haven't found a good program for this (although to be fair, I haven't really looked). Thanks!

    I used to use CS4 but now I am using EazyDraw. Way easier and more intuitive to use and saves a crap load of space on your hard drive.

  2. I own both platforms but use the Mac about 95% of the time. The Mac is more expensive but then again they tend not fail as quickly as PC's from my experience. I use MS Office, which you can get at a discounted rate or free since you are a student. I think the main point to making your choice will be what software you need. Some stuff is PC or in my case Mac only. Also I find the Mac much easier for making figures for papers or if you do any type of video or film editing Macs stack up a little higher than PCs. But if you just need something a little less pricey to type up some papers or make a Powerpoint on, you should get a PC. The main selling point for me for the Mac was the Time Machine, which backups all my buttons with the simple click of an icon.

  3. It can't hurt to ask, I brought it up and was granted some moving money (3k) since they couldn't up my stipend to a competing schools offer. Remember diplomacy is getting what you want while the idiot walks away from table still smiling.

  4. 1. Email your top few choices first.

    2. Tell them that you are starting in the fall and you are quite interested in doing a rotation in their lab (before emailing them, pull down some of their recent articles to be pseudo-up to date on what they do). Also make sure to ask them in the email if they are willing to take on a graduate student. If they answer no, waste no more time with these folks.

    3. They propose projects, you just do them.

  5. Has he though of applying for a Department of Natural Resources job with the state wherever you go, or game warden jobs. Another thing is if you move to the coast he might want to check out a job at NOAA

  6. What was valuable to me:

    -1TB hard drive to back up to

    -Bookcase (you accrue a crap ton of books)

    -Scanner (why have a filing cabinet when you can have a digital one that takes up no space at all)

    -Google Docs account (20GB for $5 a year ain't bad when you can access it anywhere)

    -Laptop (unless you are really stationary or you need the extra power of a desktop)

    -Alcohol (lots of it)

    -Specific hardbound notebooks (I use Black 'n' Reds) individually for taking notes in seminars and notes from meeting with the boss. It helps for refering back to stuff.

    -Digital recorder for class

    -Dry erase/combo corkboard (I leave myself profanity-laced messages in the morning so at least I'll smile when I get back home)

    -Sleeping Bag (one day shall come when you are working O/N at school so be prepared for it shall come and it shall come quickly)

  7. On the Mac:

    1. Time Machine (of course for backing up)

    2. EndNote (makes citations a breeze and you can get a student discount). My only advice, buy it now. I mean now dammit.

    3. Papers (keep a pdf of all my articles and I can attach my notes to them as well as look at them on my iTouch)

    4. StatPlus (cheaper but more limited version of SPSS)

    5. EazyDraw (great way to make figures and less space and monetary costs than CS4)

    6. FileMaker (great for creating databases)

    7. Aperture (takes iPhoto out back behind the woodshed and puts it to shame)

    8. MacVector (only relevant if you are biologist)

  8. Go to rent.com and look up apartment rates between the two, ask grad students about utility costs (sometimes this can be a huge gap between the two), think about commute distance or public transit cost). Also think about what there is to do around each place and the cost of going out and entertainment. That is what I did.

  9. I only got acceptances to every school I applied to. poor me.

    Once again seadouche you give off the stank of pretentiousness. I too got accepted to every school that I applied but you know what these folks couldn't give a rats doodoo maker. We are all here to get and give information and commiserate about becoming/being a graduate student without smarmy comments by cockbites like you. And herself in a Utopian scenario, seadouche and I could get along at a bar. If he's on his best behaivor and stands in the corner of the bar, I might "accidentally" miss when throwing empty beer bottles at him. But in reality, it would never work and to quote George Thorogood & The Destroyers, "I drink alone!" And herself you are right the powerprep software still looks like that crap runs on DOS (I don't know if this reference is lost on half the folks in here?).

  10. Just write a short simple note that thanks them for taking the time out of their day to meet with you and how you enjoyed discussing their research (if they did). Since you are accepted you can write a blurb about how you look forward to joining the institution and interacting with them in the future.

  11. Why buy that thing when you can just use Endnote to keep a digital copy of papers, your synpopsis, and EndNote is vital to maintain sanity and citations when writing. Or if you don't want to spend that much, check out Papers if you are a Mac user. I use both applications because I can pull up a paper quickly on my iTouch when I'm not near my laptop. Endnote is definitely the way to go and you should get a student discount on it from the grad school.

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