Great howto for writing a research paper in one day or less…

January 31st, 2010 by EvilT

From the good people at Nerd Paradise

Quoted here only to archive the work all work done by Blake on Nerd Paradise at the link above…

How to Write a 20 Page Research Paper in Under a Day

Post by Blake
So you’ve procrastinated again. You told yourself you wouldn’t do this 2 months ago when your professor assigned you this. But you procrastinated anyway. Shame on you. It’s due in a few hours. What are you going to do?

Pick a Topic

  • The more “legally-oriented” your topic is, the better. You’ll see why.
  • It has to be something you feel strongly about. Strong as in it makes you want to open your window and yell and shake your fist about it at joggers passing by. That strong.
  • It also has to be something that you already know some stuff about.
  • It also needs to have some depth to it. It can’t be like “We should have free pizza in lecture every Friday”. That’s lame. -Unless you’re really creative, then that could possibly work if your professor has a sense of humor and you really can write 20 pages about something silly like that.

Make a list

  • …of every possible outcome that this issue could cause in
    • …the near future
    • …the far future
  • …of every person that this topic affects.
  • …of any instances where this topic has come in the news.
  • …what you would do about this topic if you had the chance/power/enough-sugar
  • …any little detail you can think of

The important thing about this is to think of ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING, no matter how silly or far-fetched. It’ll make your professor go “hmm, didn’t think about that one”. You can even get your friends to help you with this one. The more the merrier. It’s best to do this on a computer, because…

Reorder everything

Put your most obvious argument first.

Then put weird off the wall stuff, regardless of importance.

Put the strongest argument for your case next.

Now list the incidents that will help argue for your point. Don’t know of any incidents in the news to help argue your point? That’s ok. Make up some, except keep it really really generic. When it comes time to quote the source, remember this: There are over 6 billion people in the world. There are countless newspapers and other sources that document people doing…stuff. If you list incidents that are generic enough and your topic isn’t extremely weird, at least one person out there has done something notable/stupid/crazy enough to make it to the news. Also, people have sued each other over everything imaginable. Find a court case database. Your topic has SOMEHOW manifested itself in court at some point in history. I can almost guarantee it. Just make sure that the situations you come up with are physically possible.

Now, list everything that could be construed to be the answer to the question “if elected, what would you do about this issue?”

It’s best to keep all this in the form of an outline.

Spaces

Now add several lines of space under each bullet. Keep adding spaces until your text document has reached the goal size of your paper.

Now print it out.

Get the hell away from your computer

  • I’m serious.
  • No really, get away from the computer.
  • Go outside and sit under a tree. If you hate outside, or if it’s too cold for humans to survive, or if there’s a band of rabid dogs roaming your neighborhood, good. It’ll help you write faster.

The reason why you should do this is because everyone magically becomes ADD when they are near a computer. You can check your AIM messages later.

Write

Write a fiery rant in each of the spaces you alloted. Get pumped. Just don’t begin every paragraph with “I swear upon my father’s grave…” Also try not to repeat yourself too much. Be very specific. Talk to your reader as though they’ve never heard of your subject before. Write at about the same size that your typed version will be. Don’t worry too much if you don’t fill in all the spaces. But if you feel strongly enough about your topic, then this really shouldn’t be a problem. If you’re like me and can’t think linearly you can skip around as much as you want.

Go Back Inside

Type everything. You’ll also notice more things occur to you as you type. Go ahead and throw them in in the corresponding categories. Don’t jump around too much at this point though. Maintain focus and bash out that essay as fast as possible. Although you should do this as fast as possible, be a typo nazi. Those little things really make it evident you did this at the last minute.

Time for that whole “research” part

Believe it or not, nothing you said was original. Remember what I said earlier about 6 billion people? Apply now. Pick each topic/case/scenario/subpoint. Anything you had to say about those has already been said by some scholar or professor or newspaper. Google it up. It won’t take long. Take a few key words from your main argument of each section and see what you get. Paraphrase their main argument or quote a few lines. Add the proper citations. Do NOT plagiarize.

Formatting

  • Some word processors are capable of non-integer spacing. Try 2.1 or 2.2 spacing.
  • There’s also the Good ol’ Margin trick
  • Title page
  • Did your professor specify to use MLA citations? She/he didn’t? Good. APA citation guidelines are much more friendly with website sources. Check it out.

Print.

Turn in.

Good job. Have a cookie.

Decrypting those annoying OSX key sequences.

January 27th, 2010 by EvilT

For those of you who came from the PC and wondered what the heck the flower and the thing that looks kinda like a backslash were… ;)

One of the best bicycle information sites available.

January 23rd, 2010 by EvilT

Sheldon Brown-Bicycle Technical Information

FREE online Computer Science courses!

January 14th, 2010 by EvilT

From the good people at supergeekland

FREE online Computer Science courses!

Howto reset a VirtualBox VM

January 2nd, 2010 by EvilT

Really simple:

VBoxManage will give you a list of currently running vm’s

#VBoxManage list runningvms

Then use VBoxManage from the command line as described below:

#VBoxManage controlvm <vmname> pause|resume|reset|poweroff|savestate

get the complete list of options with: #VBoxManage controlvm

A Lightly lifted map of common computer ports and componenets. From the good folks at Geekologie

January 2nd, 2010 by EvilT

Geekologie

computer-hardware-2

SWEET!!!! Para-virtual network drivers for Windows and Linux in VirtualBox!

January 1st, 2010 by EvilT

These drivers are stable and much faster than having VirtualBox emulate the network card. You need V3.1.X virtualbox to use the new adapter.

The adapter works for Windows 2k, xp, and probably 2003…

The HowTo

Tip: How to setup Windows guest paravirtual network drivers | KVM – The Linux Kernel-Based Virtual Machine

Sourceforge site…

http://sourceforge.net/projects/kvm/files/

Icovia® Space Planner – Room planning site

November 16th, 2009 by EvilT

Excellent… Fast… If you want to plan where to put everything in your room check out this site.

Icovia® Space Planner

Troubleshooting Windows email client’s ability to view inline tif or tiff files from Mac copy/paste

September 7th, 2009 by EvilT

it appears that if you are creating an email on an OSX Mac, and you copy and paste an image into the email, the image is put inline as a .tiff attachment. Well I’m not sure when this started in the Windows line, but it appears that windows no longer has the association for .tif or .tiff files in Outlook / Outlook Express / Etc…

Here is a link to try:
You cannot view pictures by using Windows Picture and Fax Viewer in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/921048

Here is an example of a script to create the associations via the registry in XP:

This reg file will restore .tif and .tiff file association to Windows XP
default.

Copy between “=====” and paste in notepad, save as tif.reg

Double-click or right-click and merge into the Registry.

========================
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00

[-HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.tiff]

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.tiff]
“Content Type”=”image/tiff”
“PerceivedType”=”image”
@=”TIFImage.Document”

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.tiff\OpenWithProgids]
“TIFImage.Document”=hex(0):

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.tiff\PersistentHandler]
@=”{098f2470-bae0-11cd-b579-08002b30bfeb}”

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.tif]
“Content Type”=”image/tiff”
“PerceivedType”=”image”
@=”TIFImage.Document”

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.tif\OpenWithProgids]
“TIFImage.Document”=hex(0):

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.tif\PersistentHandler]
@=”{098f2470-bae0-11cd-b579-08002b30bfeb}”

[-HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document]

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document]
“EditFlags”=dword:00010000
“FriendlyTypeName”=hex(2):40,00,25,00,53,00,79,00, 73,00,74,00,65,00,6d,00,52,\
00,6f,00,6f,00,74,00,25,00,5c,00,53,00,79,00,73,00 ,74,00,65,00,6d,00,33,00,\
32,00,5c,00,73,00,68,00,69,00,6d,00,67,00,76,00,77 ,00,2e,00,64,00,6c,00,6c,\
00,2c,00,2d,00,33,00,30,00,36,00,00,00
“ImageOptionFlags”=dword:00000000

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document\DefaultIcon]
@=”shimgvw.dll,4″

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document\shell]

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document\shell\open]
“MuiVerb”=”@shimgvw.dll,-550″

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document\shell\open\com mand]
@=”rundll32.exe C:\\WINDOWS\\System32\\shimgvw.dll,ImageView_Fulls creen
%1″

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document\shell\open\Dro pTarget]
“Clsid”=”{E84FDA7C-1D6A-45F6-B725-CB260C236066}”

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document\shell\printto]

[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TIFImage.Document\shell\printto\ command]
@=”rundll32.exe C:\\WINDOWS\\System32\\shimgvw.dll,ImageView_Print To /pt
\”%1\” \”%2\” \”%3\” \”%4\”"

========================

Mac OS X Keyboard shortcuts.

April 26th, 2009 by EvilT

Mac OS X keyboard shortcuts.

I find myself searching for these from time to time, and if they are here I know where they are… ;)

Startup

Keystroke Description
Press X during startup Force Mac OS X startup
Press Option-Command-Shift-Delete
during startup
Bypass primary startup volume and seek a different startup volume (such as a CD or external disk)
Press C during startup Start up from a CD that has a system folder
Press N during startup Attempt to start up from a compatible network server (NetBoot)
Press T during startup Start up in FireWire Target Disk mode
Press Shift during startup start up in Safe Boot mode and temporarily disable login items and non-essential kernel extension files (Mac OS X 10.2 and later)
Press Command-V during startup Start up in Verbose mode.
Press Command-S during startup Start up in Single-User mode
Finder window
Keyboard shortcut Description
Command-W Close Window
Option-Command-W Close all Windows
Command-Right Arrow Expand folder (list view)
Option-Command-Right Arrow Expand folder and nested subfolders (list view)
Command-Left Arrow Collapse Folder (list view)
Option-Command-Up Arrow Open parent folder and close current window
(Assigned in Keyboard & Mouse preferences) Show Package Contents (of selected file in Mac OS X 10.5 or later only). To create this contextual menu shortcut, open Keyboard & Mouse preferences in Mac OS X 10.5, click Keyboard Shortcuts, click the “+” button, choose Finder.app as the Application, and type “Show Package Contents” (exactly), and set whichever shortcut you want, such as Command-Control-S.
Menu commands
Keyboard shortcut Description
Shift-Command-Q Apple Menu
Log out
Shift-Option-Command-Q Apple Menu
Log out immediately
Shift-Command-Delete Finder Menu
Empty Trash
Option-Shift-Command-Delete Finder Menu
Empty Trash without dialog
Command-H Finder Menu
Hide Finder
Option-Command-H Finder Menu
Hide Others
Command-N File Menu
New Finder window
Shift-Command-N File Menu
New Folder
Command-O File Menu
Open
Command-S File Menu
Save
Shift-Command-S File Menu
Save as
Command-P File Menu
Print
Command-W File Menu
Close Window
Option-Command-W File Menu
Close all Windows
Command-I File Menu
Get Info
Option-Command-I File Menu
Show Attributes Inspector
Command-D File Menu
Duplicate
Command-L File Menu
Make Alias
Command-R File Menu
Show original
Command-T File Menu
Add to Favorites (Mac OS X 10.2.8 or earlier), Add to Sidebar (Mac OS X 10.3 or later—use Shift-Command-T for Add to Favorites)
Command-Delete File Menu
Move to Trash
Command-E File Menu
Eject
Command-F File Menu
Find
Command-Z Edit Menu
Undo
Command-X Edit Menu
Cut
Command-C Edit Menu
Copy
Command-V Edit Menu
Paste
Command-A Edit Menu
Select All
Command-1 View Menu
View as Icons
Command-2 View Menu
View as List
Command-3 View Menu
View as Columns
Command-B View Menu
Hide Toolbar
Command-J View Menu
Show View Options
Command – [ Go Menu
Back
Command - ] Go Menu
Forward
Shift-Command-C Go Menu
Computer
Shift-Command-H Go Menu
Home
Shift-Command-I Go Menu
iDisk
Shift-Command-A Go Menu
Applications
Shift-Command-F Go Menu
Favorites
Shift-Command-G Go Menu
Goto Folder
Command-K Go Menu
Connect to Server
Command-M Window Menu
Minimize Window
Option-Command-M Window Menu
Minimize All Windows
Command-? Help Menu
Open Mac Help
Command-Space Open Spotlight (Mac OS X 10.4 or later)
Command-esc Front Row
Activates Front Row for certain Apple computers
Universal Access and VoiceOver
Keyboard shortcut Description
Option-Command-8 Turn on Zoom
Option-Command-+ (plus) Zoom in
Option-Command– (minus) Zoom out
Control-Option-Command-8 Switch to White on Black
Control-F1 Turn on Full Keyboard Access
When Full Keyboard Access is turned on, you can use the key combinations listed in the table below from the Finder.
Control-F2 Full Keyboard Access
Highlight Menu
Control-F3 Full Keyboard Access
Highlight Dock
Control-F4 Full Keyboard Access
Highlight Window (active) or next window behind it
Control-F5 Full Keyboard Access
Highlight Toolbar
Control-F6 Full Keyboard Access
Highlight Utility window (palette)
Command-F5 or fn-Command-F5 Turn VoiceOver on or off (Mac OS X 10.4 or later)
Control-Option-F8 or fn-Control-Option-F8 Open VoiceOver Utility (Mac OS X 10.4 or later)
Control-Option-F7 or fn-Control-option-F7 Display VoiceOver menu (Mac OS X 10.4 or later)
Control-Option-;
or fn-Control-option-;
Enable/disable VoiceOver Control-Option lock (Mac OS X 10.4 or later)

The Universal Access preference pane allows you to turn on Mouse Keys. When Mouse Keys is on, you can use the numeric keypad to move the mouse. If your computer doesn’t have a numeric keypad, use the Fn (function) key.

Mouse Keys
Keystroke Description
8 Move Up
2 Move Down
4 Move Left
6 Move Right
1, 3, 7, and 9 Move Diagonally
5 Press Mouse Button
0 Hold Mouse Button
. (period on keypad) Release Mouse Button (use after pressing 0)
Other Commands
Keystroke Description
Option-Command-D Show/Hide Dock
Command-Tab Switch application
tab Highlight next item
Command-Up Arrow Move up one directory
Command-Down Arrow Move down one directory
Page Up or Control-Up Arrow Move up one page
Page Down or Control-Down Arrow Move down one page
Option-Drag Copy to new location
Option-Command-Drag Make alias in new location
Command-Drag Move to new location without copying
Shift-Command-C Show Colors palette in application
Command-T Show Font palette in application
Command-Shift-3 Take a picture of the screen
Command-Shift-4 Take a picture of the selection
Command-Shift-4, then press Control while selecting Take a picture of the screen, place in Clipboard
Command-Shift-4, then Spacebar Take a picture of the selected window
Option-Command-esc Force Quit
Control-Eject Restart, Sleep, Shutdown dialog box
Control-Command-Eject Quit all applications and restart
Option-Command-Eject or
Option-Command-Power
Sleep
Command-click window toolbar button (upper right corner) Cycle through available views for the window’s toolbar (dependant on the nature of the Finder or application window)
Command-` Cycle through windows in application or Finder (if more than one window is open)
Function-Delete (portables only–PowerBook, iBook, MacBook, MacBook Pro) Forward Delete (delete the character to the right of your cursor)