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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (April 28, 2000)
We want your input! If you know a great site we should review, let us know. Send the URL to sitereviews@steamtunnels.net Organize Your Life Evite http://www.evite.com/ Be the social butterfly of your universe. Evite is the one-stop invitation service—and you don’t have to be getting married. On Evite you can invite friends over for pizza and a video—just email once and cover the whole gang. Or start a softball team or a roller-blading group with an open invitation. A great campus social organizer, and the easiest way to make new friends. Free Stuff Easy$$$ http://go.to/easy$$$ Compiled by a Steamtunnels reader who goes by the name Slayer4235@aol.com, this is a great site to find those folks that pay you to surf the web or read email. Right on the home page is a chart that lists free services and how much they pay. You may need to refresh the site from time to time—it has the feel of a dorm room application—but that’s part of the fun. If you spend all your time online, why not get some cash for it? Study Guides Chemistry Guide http://www.woodrow.org/teachers/chemistry/ Part of Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson Leadership Program in Chemistry, this Ivy tinged site is basically a Cliff’s Notes for all Chem students. The best feature is a study guide which "breaks down" the complicated subject of chemistry into 25 easily understood "elements" like the Atom, the Periodic Table, , Chemical Bonds and Molecular Architecture. You can test yourself in each of the areas through the category-specific Q&As. Apart . from the plenitude of teaching materials and online tutorials, the Chem guide also has an ask-a-scientist option where you can Ask Dr. Math (ask a specific question, or search an archive of more than 4,500 previously asked questions), Ask an Expert or Ask Dr. Neutrino. History Guide http://celeste.carleton.edu/curricular/HIST/ guides.html An extraordinarily in-depth step-by-step resource geared toward familiarizing students with all aspects of the study of history. From the differences between primary and second ary sources to how to recognize the difference between fact and interpretation in historical accounts, this site provides tips for critical reading, research aids (when to footnote/end note) and a never-ending list of suggested reading for further study, like E.H. Carr's What Is History? Better yet? It's not dull. The occa sional "philosophy of history" remarks make you remember why you wanted to study the subject to begin with. Learn to www.Learnto.com How about learning some applicable life les sons for a change. This “ability utility" is geared toward grown-up kids eager to learn some quick real-life lessons. Articles range from how-to guides on style and social graces, to getting along with a roommate, to tips on fit ness, technology and travel. Hit the Free Learning link to read tutorials on Appreciate Poetry, How to Host a Dinner Party, Hanging Wallpaper, even how to Understand Basketball. There’s also the discussion area on The Learnlines Forum, where you can post your own questions and answers about any quandary: For example, ask how to make baklava or build a bookshelf and you’ll get a response. Long Distance dialpad www.dialpad.com If you’ve got a headset and a PC, you can get all the free long distance you want at dialpad. There’s lots of free long distance online, but dialpad is the only one where the person that receives the call doesn’t need to be online as well—you can call a real phone with dialpad. The quality is cell-phone at best; a lot depends on your headset. Customize your own phone book—every entry has space for home phone, work phone, cell phones and faxes, so you don’t have to make multiple entries. This works best with Internet Explorer 4.5 or better. The sign-in takes about two minutes, and then you're off. Sell It e Wanted www.eWanted.com The world’s first “upside down auction” site is a lazy man’s dream come true. The exact opposite of eBay, this site allows buyers to post what they want and makes the sellers bid. This means you don’t waste time hunting for what you want, and there’s no fending off other buyers or bidders. It’s all free and has more than 1,000 categories listing virtually any product or service. It's easy. You place an eWant ad specifying the items you want, the type, the color, the location, the con dition, anything. Then sellers (dealers, resellers, spring cleaners) submit you offers. Female Solidarity Chickdick www.chickclick.com/ Women unite! Actually, it’s already happened— on the Internet, at least. First off, Chickclick pro vides links to other lady sites, from HipMama ("Better than a double prozac latte”) to Hissyfit (with a great guide to road tripping, just for women). In addition, the Chickclick home page has services from the practical (“Gotten a Pap smear lately? Reuse and redecorate”) to the party-animal (“Chick lounge”).