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by firefoxman1 5322 days ago
Haha that's awesome. I'm definitely going to try dropping into some classes (I kinda like breaking rules).
1 comments

Here's some money saving tips then. Most universities don't charge extra for taking crazy numbers of units as an undergrad, so rather than just drop in why not take 30 units a semester. A lot of undergrad survey courses have multiple choice exams and don't represent significant additional workload, but can be fun, the psych classes are also a place that will have pretty girls you don't find in engineering.

Dorms and school cafeteria food are expensive. But living off campus means commute time and parking expenses. Two options are to secretly rent a couch from someone living on campus, and to find a location on campus to stash a bedroll and just live there. Where I went to school there were carefully camouflaged dugouts in a canyon behind the physics building where there were about a dozen students living incognito for free.

People at my university used to live in the woods, in tents. Some were known to construct multi-storey treehouses. Says a lot about the institution I attended. (It says it was full of hippies, rather than that it was expensive.)

Can't you just live on campus and cook your own food rather than eating at the cafeteria? Or are you forced to pay for the cafeteria as part of the package? I'm unfamiliar with the american system.

>Where I went to school there were carefully camouflaged dugouts in a canyon behind the physics building where there were about a dozen students living incognito for free.

That sounds awesome. This probably isn't correct, but when you say camoflaged dugouts, I'm thinking of an elaborate system of WWI style trenches, or perhaps that Al Queada cave complex that Dick Cheney saw in a fever dream. In my mind, it's like some kind of survivalist-nerd version of a frat house.

I doubt I would have been able to resist the temptation to forget my classes and concentrate on expanding my invisible canyon-based physics fortress. Who amongst us can honestly say that it has never been their dream to inhabit a secret underground base with a team of renegades?

There's room for disagreement, but I think it's not such a good idea to take 30 units per semester even if you can ace the exams.

It's like everything else involving time: The secret to life is not to work N hours per week, but to work (N/2) hours per week on the right things.

For example, courses with middling-to-poor teachers are just not worth your time: You can watch better lectures online, instead, or just read the textbooks out of the library. And on the flip side, if you find a course with an excellent teacher it's probably worth your time to take that course seriously: Do the readings or the labs, and if you're some sort of ungodly speed-reader do extra readings or labs in that course. (Ask the teacher what else you can do. They will fall over themselves to tell you. That is why they are excellent.)

And if all your courses require no brainpower you need more challenging courses. There are always more challenging courses. After all, even if you're some kind of super-genius who has taken every course and is now bored, you can always invent new courses.