RSS Readers

Student Bloggers

 

Friday
Sep162011

Is the MacBook Air Ready for College?

The third iteration of Apple's MacBook Air is finally ready to be the average student's only computer, and not a moment too soon.

The first version of the Air was expensive and slow. The 2010 edition was a vast improvement, offering improved performance across the board along with a cheaper price tag, but it still boasted obsolete Core 2 Duo processors. The latest model, sporting the newest i5 and i7 Sandy Bridge processors, is finally sufficient for almost all students. I know this because I got one last week, and have been using it exclusively for everything from note taking to HD video editing.

Read on for my impressions of Apple's ultraportable as a student's primary laptop.

Click to read more ...

Friday
Sep162011

Man on the Street: What Does a Processor Do? (Presented by Intel)

Need a laptop? We've teamed up with Intel to bring you the HackCollege Laptop Chooser. If you share the Laptop Chooser, you'll be entered to win a Samsung Series 9 Notebook!

Today we begin a series of man on the street videos asking random students around Trinity University a few questions about technology. Today's question: What is the difference between a solid state drive, and a regular hard drive?

Be on the lookout over the next few weeks for the rest of the videos!

Friday
Sep162011

Preview: The Most Underrated Note-taking App

Need a laptop? We've teamed up with Intel to bring you the HackCollege Laptop Chooser. If you share the Laptop Chooser, you'll be entered to win a Samsung Series 9 Notebook!

Thursday
Sep152011

TweetMemeFace+: Never Use a Website Again

This is where the magic happens.

Need a laptop? We've teamed up with Intel to bring you the HackCollege Laptop Chooser. If you share the Laptop Chooser, you'll be entered to win a Samsung Series 9 Notebook!

So I recently got a volunteer gig helping a nonprofit revamp its social media presence. It's great fun! But something came up that reminded me that the way my internet works is sometimes not the way other people's internet works. The woman I'm helping out started asking me about how to redesign the organization's Twitter page--it was, she though, pretty ugly. I pointed out that no one was ever going to see the page, so the redesign was low-profile. She looked at me like I was insane.

That was when I realized that she didn't know about desktop clients. 

And see, I love desktop clients like I love brownies. (That is to say, a lot.) So, though not groundbreaking, I'm going to do a quick rundown of the two that I like/use for those of you in the house who did not realize that you never have to deal with actual social media websites ever again if you don't want to.

Tweetdeck: This is what I use for HackCollege and my own things. If you're talking about a desktop client for your computer, it's awesome: you can schedule updates and manage multiple accounts, and the user lookup is quick and easy. It will handle Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn--if you're just interested in status updates, this makes it so that you never have to look at a website again. However, it's not perfect--recently, TweetDeck has quit sending scheduled Facebook updates, and the Android version of the app is horrible (though the iOS version is delightful in every way). However, it will forever be my favorite for the ease of multiple account management and the in-app photo viewing.

Hootsuite: It's like Tweetdeck for grownups! It handles the same set of networks (along with Myspace and Foursquare). Hoosuite is targeted at more corporate operations--it's what I recommended that my volunteer coordinator use. The interface is more or less the same as Tweetdeck's (a column layout with in-update buttons to control what you do with the update/user), and anyone who's familiar with one can catch on to the other pretty quickly. The nice thing about Hootsuite is that if you need to push an RSS feed to Twitter or Facebook, it will do that for you. This makes it easy to spread the headlines from your site around the blogosphere. There is a limit on the number of accounts a free version of Hootsuite will let you manage, but it's well within what most folks need--you get five accounts/pages on the free plan. If you are the sort of person who really wants to track what posts get the most attention, go with Hootsuite--its big selling point is the huge number of analytics it takes from your profile.

tl;dr: TweetDeck is great for managing multiple personal/public accounts if you don't care much about statistics. Hootsuite's for people who want little graphs of all of their data and have fewer accounts to manage.

Do you have a desktop client that you love? Let us know in the comments!

Thursday
Sep152011

How to Live in a State of Uncertainty

Uncertainty is coming to an intersection with no direction. Photo courtesy of Mathieu Struck. Licensed under CC BY-2.0.

Need a laptop? We've teamed up with Intel to bring you the HackCollege Laptop Chooser. If you share the Laptop Chooser, you'll be entered to win a Samsung Series 9 Notebook!

Uncertainty is a fact that exists in just about every state of our life, and it makes life both absolutely terrifying and absolutely incredible. If we knew everything that was going to happen to us, there'd be no sense of wonder. Of course, as a stressed out college student, sometimes I feel like saying, "to hell with this 'sense of wonder'-- tell me what the eff to do."

 

Whether you're a freshmen just entering the folds of university life or if you're senior counting down the days until you're booted out into the real world, uncertainty is a very real ruling factor in your life right now. As for me, I'm uncertain about where to apply to grad school, whether I should work before I go to school, what should be my area of focus. For freshmen, you're uncertain about what classes to take, what you want to major in, how to make friends, and just about a bazillion other things.

There's not a whole lot you can do while you're in a limbo state of uncertainty and not knowing what you can do to set your life down on tangible ground is scary. To help you figure out what to do when you're stuck in a state of uncertainty, here are a few tips.

Control What You Can Control

Life might be presenting you with a whole slew of situations and circumstances that you might have zero control over. When that happens and you feel everything spinning out of your grasp, forcus your attention on the things you can control. These things could be like your homework. You have your syllabus, so you can always know what is due. You can always stay on top of your grades and control that, even if you don't know what you're going to be doing in six months after graduation. You can also control your applications to jobs and schools.

For younger students, you can focus on homework, but also on club activities or on side projects like making and editing films, or doing some research with your professor. Whatever it is, find something you can control in your academic life and seize it.

Make Goals for Yourself

Goals give you direction in your life. Without any goals in a state of uncertainty, you'll end up without any direction and without any idea of where you want to be or what you want to do. You may not know exactly how you're going to get there or what you'll be doing, but at least create a list of goals that you want to aspire to in the next year, two years, or five years.

Creating and realizing goals may actually help you put things in perspective. It will help you formulate a basic guideline or plan on how to attain those goals. But if you never give yourself goals, you'll never have anything to plan for.

Stay Awesome

This is, indeed, a real suggestion. I have no idea where I'm going to be after graduation. You may have no idea what you're going to major in.  You may have no idea what's in store for you in this really hard class you signed up for this semester. But if you concentrate on your strengths, you are not going to let yourself down. Find what you are good at, what you are passionate about it, and put your stock in that. If you're really good at computers, self-teach yourself stuff or join a computer forum or club at school. If you're really good at writing, create a blog, talk to other writers, join a writers guild to have your work critiqued.

Whatever you're passionate about, stick with it. Successful people are passionate people. Whenever situations become too full of uncertainity that they start to become overwhelming, you'll always have your skills and passions to fall back on. These passions can be what make you marketable for jobs or can even help you decide what you want to do in school.

What do you do in times of uncertainty? How do you cope with it? Let us know in the comments!

Wednesday
Sep142011

Better Browsing – Gain Complete Control over YouTube with YouTube Options

Need a laptop? We've teamed up with Intel to bring you the HackCollege Laptop Chooser. If you share the Laptop Chooser, you'll be entered to win a Samsung Series 9 Notebook!

If you’re like most college students, you’ve probably seen a video or two (or hundreds!) on YouTube. While we all know and love this great site for providing us with classics like Charlie bit my finger and David After Dentist, don’t you ever wish you could get rid of all the crap on YouTube and put the emphasis back on the great videos? If you browse YouTube with Chrome, now you can thanks to YouTube Options, a free extension (sorry Firefox users, but I wasn’t able to find an equivalent for Mozilla’s browser).

Download YouTube Options here and find out more about it here. YouTube Options allows you to do a myriad of things that makes browsing YouTube (or any of the other sites it supports, including Vimeo, Funny or Die, and Hulu) much, much better.

Video Options

  1. If you hate those annoying in-video ads and annotations like I do, simply block them all with YouTube Options. It’s so wonderfully refreshing to not have to click on little boxes in videos anymore to make them go away!
  2. Set default viewing size and viewing quality so you no longer have to adjust them manually. Just sit back and enjoy your videos in your favorite resolution every time!
  3. Hate auto-play? Disable it with YouTube Options and press play on your own terms.

Layout Options

YouTube Options includes a great box to the left of this feature showing exactly which parts of the YouTube UX will be shown per your preferences. Hate comments? Hide them! For a really minimalist interface, you can even hide everything but the video and matte the background if you so desire. This is definitely my favorite part of YouTube Options: eliminate all distractions and only keep the content you want to see.

Extra Functionality

Unfortunately, the Chrome Web Store Developer Agreement prevents the creator of YouTube Options from including another feature - saving all available resolutions and versions of a video. If you want to unlock that ability, download the full version of YouTube Options here. Finally, keep in mind that like most of the software I use, YouTube Options is absolutely free! Give it a shot, and I promise you’ll never go back to browsing YouTube without it.

Do you know of any other YouTube or video site hacks? Let us know in the comments!

Wednesday
Sep142011

Man on the Street: SSD vs. HDD (Presented by Intel)

Need a laptop? We've teamed up with Intel to bring you the HackCollege Laptop Chooser. If you share the Laptop Chooser, you'll be entered to win a Samsung Series 9 Notebook!

Today we begin a series of man on the street videos asking random students around Trinity University a few questions about technology. Today's question: What is the difference between a solid state drive, and a regular hard drive?

Be on the lookout over the next few weeks for the rest of the videos!

Wednesday
Sep142011

DrinkOwl is a Poor 21+ College Student's Best Friend

DrinkOwl: Great deals + adorable mascot = awesome.Finding a spare night to go out and let loose is a cornerstone of your college experience. You work hard all week, power through all your classes, read all those chapters, take pages of pages of notes, all so you can find at least one night to relax and spend some time with your friends.

DrinkOwl can help you have the best night possible for less. Downloading the app for iOS, Android, or BlackBerry or using it on the web opens a whole world of inexpensive drink opportunities. DrinkOwl locates you within your city, and then presents you, either on a map or on a list, with several options where there are reduced prices on drinks.

The app also categorizes (and with colored tabs, no less!) what kind of drinks are being served, whether mixed drinks, liquor, or beer so you don't end up at a place that isn't actully serving the kind of dinrk you were hoping for.

DrinkOwl lists over 50,000 drink specials and coupons in over 75 cities. San Antonio is one of those cities, though DrinkOwl is still working on providing the city with "Events" and "Coupons." However, if all it does is provide me with which places have the cheapest drinks in town clostest to me, I am sold. The app also features liquor stores if you'd rather just go buy something and bring it back for a party at your own place.

The app is free to download and should be on the phone of any college student over 21.

Have you ever used DrinkOwl? What do you think of it? Let us know in the comments!

[via Lifehacker]

Page 1 ... 7 8 9 10 11 ... 196 Next 8 Entries »