I remember having these notes ingrained into my brain in middle school; at Ithaca, I didn't know a single person who actively used Cornell notes for note taking. That said, actively engaging and re-engaging with content will help you build better internal bodies of knowledge on the subject, so you'll retain the content long after prelims and finals.
Same here. Ithaca schools are just soooo proud of the Cornell note taking system they taught it to us as if it was eternal and essential, but ultimately useless, just like cursive.
I also went to Cornell and never saw it used or mentioned once.
I remember those back in middle school. My history teacher beat on us relentlessly to do them, to the point of having large stacks of paper with lines down the middle in the room and handing out bundles of the same at regular intervals. No one did it unless she was checking for a grade, which was infrequent. I did well in the class, and neither I nor the other A students took notes this way. Just sometimes wrote in the margins like normal people, or underlined something important, then put these into separate documents. Having a sheet of the synthesized "metadata" (dates, contextual bits, etc.) was much more useful than having to page through to get at the information.
The address bar in Chrome shows both the string as a potential search, and URLs in recent history/tabs with that string. Why wouldn't a Handshake-supporting browser do something similar?
This is not a crowdfunding platform. We are more like a service, provides access to a huge list of investors. This saves a lot of money and time for entrepreneurs and founders in finding a suitable candidate.
Gold is at best Okay. There is a common belief that gold is a good conductor, but it has too high resistance. Look at the table https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_resistivity_and_con... gold is 5 on the list, well behind copper (which is what we use), and only barely ahead of aluminum.
If the transactions are just going to the deposit addresses that exchanges shuffle around, than it's possible that 67% of ETH activity as of late is tied to people sending to and from exchanges.
You make/invest heavily into an ICO, send your CP/ordered hit/fentanyl proceeds into it, and then sell your ICO tokens for ETH.
Most ICOs don't do KYC; if they're asking for crypto-based investments they likely aren't asking for conventional investors and aren't vetting the speculators who only want to know how long they have to hold the token before dumping on the market
A few maybe. It's definitely the reason we (Pink) went ICO for funding, to be able to raise money because real-world contacts didn't like the potential link to funding our venture.
I read your site last night and was intrigued by the bold use of traditional finance language to describe your ICO. "Token-shares", dividends, etc. You're not worried about US securities law?