That plaza area you can walk through instead of Wentworth will have about 5 or 6 different shops in it by the end of the year, in addition to the existing clothing shop there'll be a pizza/pasta place, easyway tea, art gallery, etc.
1. If you can't handle the commitment at this point then you've already got your answer.
2. The fact that some guy who's hooking up with her wants to have his cake and eat it too shouldn't deter you from doing anything.
I doubt you'll be able to do a subject at another university which doesn't count towards a qualification at that uni on HECS. Cop the $3000 or overload by one. It's only a first year subject.
Answered 88/100 marks in MATH3962 exam, which should give me a mark of 70% in the exam and 75ish raw overall. Even if that doesn't scale (and it will) I've won pretty hard.
EDIT: Also just got C++ marks back and am sitting on 30/40 for that, so going to have to make almost zero mistakes in that...
50% raw in the exam if I'm exceptionally lucky. Past experience indicates that'll scale up to a distinction but this'll be the hardest earnt D I've ever gotten.
But conversely if I take a straightedge and stab Galois 2 years before he was shot I don't have to study any of this.
EDIT: Stupid cunt was an anarchist who died in a fucking duel at the age of 20. Why do I have to respect his mathematical opinion?
The course itself was pretty decent. It was interesting, based around concurrency and some similar stuff to COMP3520. There also SQL optimisations which take a little while to get your head around but that'll be about the hardest thing there.
I fucked up by doing no work all semester, missing 2...
Well I got 24 so I'd say a little from column a, and a little from column b.
This was a second year subject though and I put no effort into it whatsoever. If you enjoy elec stuff you might find it better.
EDIT: Third year IT subjects you can get decent marks in without any tears: COMP3520...
The only third year maths subject I can recommend is MATH3968 (Measure Theory and Fourier Analysis). It looks at defining integrals in a different way, and compared to the other advanced units I've done is actually doable and interesting.
Units I'd categorically not recommend because they were...
Units which have contributed to a degree you've already been awarded cannot be accepted for credit in a further degree. They can however be used to satisfy prerequisites, afaik, meaning you'd need to do more electives or something.
You'lll get a letter saying that the university has identified you as a 'Student at risk' and you are told to attend seminars and fill in a survey. Dunno what happens if you fuck up a second time.