Posts Tagged ‘Cacophony’

LSAT Proctor App for iPhone and iPod Touch!

Well, it took long enough but I promised that I would get an app into the iTunes app store and it is now complete. The LSAT Proctor app for iPhones and iPod Touches is now available for free! The app does require you to upgrade to iOS 4.0, though.

It features all five sections for the LSAT with vocal prompts for “Start, 5-Minutes, and Stop.” It also contains a break in the appropriate placement as well. The app has built in distractions to help you acclimate your studies to potential testing day conditions. If you are already confident in your abilities to tune  out distractions and what to focus on timing conditions, the distractions can be turned off in the settings menu.

Direct Link to download the App: http://tinyurl.com/iphonelsat

 

LSAT Cacophony: iPhone App

I know I have been absentee as of recent but that is because I am going a little insane from all that I am doing. As a “mea culpa,” here is a sneak preview into the iPhone App that I have been working on.

Notice the “LSAT Proctor” App on the home screen!

The Loading Screen!

A Clean and Simple Interface: Click Play to Start Studying.

Section 1 is currently playing; it will proceed through the sections/break until completion.

Noises driving you crazy? Turn them off. Love the noises? Hear them forever.

Share you study success with friends. Note: The Share Screen is only accessible after you have finished studying; we do not endorse further distractions.

That’s about it as of right now. I’m just working on cleaning up a few bugs and playing run around with Apple. I have no estimation as to when it will be in the App Store, but I can tell you that it will not be available before the June 2010 LSAT (sorry). The price will be: free. So if you are looking to steal the idea… it’s probably not worth the investment.

 

One Semester Down, One to Go

Grades are finally in for my last Spring Semester at USF: 3 A’s and a B… wish I could have done better, but I’m not upset considering how thin I have spread myself.

Next Monday brings the beginning of the Summer session and my attempt to take 3 condensed classes and studying for the LSAT at the same time.

I am a little concerned as I just ordered my books for one of my six-week long classes and they consisted of the following:

Hamlet
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Henry IV, Part 1
Henry IV, Part 2
The Merchant of Venice
As You Like It
Titus Andronicus
Oedipus Rex
Richard II
and more…

Not that these are particularly hard pieces but that is some extreme reading for six weeks when coupled in with two other classes and practice tests; it should be quite the experience.

The cat is out of the bag about the upcoming changes to the LSAT Cacophony, so I’m going to go ahead and say it:

I’m working on an iPhone app version of the LSAT Cacophony. It should be available in July or August. For more information, send me an email (especially if you are looking to beta test).

 

Calm Before the Storm

If you have followed the blog since its inception, you probably already knew that this week was exam week for me. Add in a sick girlfriend in the hospital (note: she’s ok), work, LSAT, and finishing my last essay and I have been slightly out of commission for the past 14-odd hours. I tried to go into work, but I was just delirious and useless, so I ended up leaving early and falling back asleep.

When I get my grades back at the end of the semester, they are usually bittersweet for me. With all the hours that I work and the back-and-forth schedule that I operate on, I am generally glad to see that I have passed as class regardless of the grade as reflection upon the class generally yields a blur. USF operates on the plus/minus scale, which is a dual-edged sword in terms of GPA. For example… to receive an A, you have to receive a score ranging from 100 to 95. Anything in the 94.999 to 93 range, would be an A- meaning that you would not receive a 4.0 for the class’s grade. I realize that some universities have their plus/minus setup differently, but that is what I am dealing with for the moment. So I receive my professional writing grade and I have done generally well on the four projects that make up the entire grade for the semester; in fact, my lowest grade on any of the projects was a 92 with the highest grade being a 96. I looked at my grade and see the following: 94.8 (A-). I can’t really be upset about it, but I am a little annoyed by the grade.

Harping on it, though, won’t yield a different result. I just have to deal with what I have been dealt, do the best I can on the LSAT and see if/where I can get into a college. Being in college as long as I have (read: seven years) has not been kind to my GPA; my focus was always on work and it hasn’t been until recently that I truly cared about the difference between a C and a B or a B and an A. I realize there are applicants with far better GPAs, but I hope to balance some of that out with my resume, which is far better than your typical college graduate. I have almost a decade of experience in the entertainment industry with more than 7 years as a manager, so I think that is a little in my favor. I don’t know if it is enough to classify me as a “Non-Traditional Applicant,” but I will accept that if it does. I also have the Under Represented Minority card to play (read: African-American) which I’ll gladly accept. I know the URM status for applicants is a heavily criticized topic and I guess my main argument against it follows something like this:

I don’t care. I don’t care if it stays and I don’t care if it goes. If they are offering it, though, and I am eligible for its classification, then I’ll gladly accept it.

Grad school is just too important not to take every opportunity offered to differentiate yourself from the next candidate. If they offered better acceptance rates for “people who wear flip-flops more often than they wear sneakers,” I would accept that as well.

Thursday is my last exam and then I’ll have a whole week off before I begin my summer courses. It feels like a long time since I have had a “week off.” Even though I will still be working during that time and in reality it will just mean I will have more work that I had to do, it will still be nice to turn off part of my brain and focus on one task for once. I started to receive the emails telling me the deadlines to declare for graduation; receiving these emails is a little surreal for me. It might be hard to understand but at times it seemed like I would never finish. When you are sleeping in the back of a utility van following a band around for months, you find a lot of time to be pensive. I absolutely love being on tour; it definitely is one of my favorite experiences. Being away from a loved one, if you are so lucky to have someone, is the hardest part but the comradeship, travel and experiences make up for it. I wish I would have taken more pictures the last time I was out, but I was too busy working. For you bands out there, if you are looking for a road manager to work for cheap, get a hold of me and we will work something out if the times match up.

I think after graduation (which I will not be walking at because it makes me feel old) I am going to try to take some time off. Not too much time but a few days or a week. I have been trying to get over to wine country and I think the girlfriend could use it as well. It is kind of crazy to consider how much of an impact this one little test has upon my life. I like to plan out things in my future, but I constantly find myself saying “well, we will see how I do on my LSAT and I’ll make my decisions from there.” At time I wish the test was two more months away and at times I wish that it was tomorrow. I know it will be upon us relatively soon and then the waiting game will begin. I think that will be quite the period of insanity, filled with many a sleepless nights.

This weekend will also serve as the first time I begin working on my update to the LSAT Cacophony. I don’t want to announce too much about it, but if I can pull it off it could be a lot of fun. I know that some of you already know about it, so I will go ahead and set an announcement date. I will make a post about the update very soon after the June LSAT.

 

LSAT: Lengthy, Sadistic and Agonizingly Tedious

Hooray for Acrostics!

Well, it is 3:55am here in Tampa, Florida and I am still awake. I had one friend recording a quick track in the studio earlier and another had a graduation party as she has recently finished pharmacy school (congratulations to you, Dr. M). With exams next week, this means that I am falling a little bit behind.

I purchased some more LSAC PrepTest books while I was near Borders as they will be non-existant in the upcoming weeks. I snagged the SuperPrep book and another one of those “10 test” compilations that they have.

I am starting to slightly panic as I am realizing this test is essentially two weeks away for me. I know, you are reading that and thinking, “I’m glad there isn’t a math section or Ryan would not do very well.” What I mean is that I have exams, then a week off and then three classes all during the Summer A (shortest Summer session) session. Essentially they will squeeze an entire semester’s worth of information into six-weeks. The LSAT is smack dab in the middle of that session. I am actually going to have to convince one of my teachers to let me miss class one of the days so that I can drive to the Sarasota USF campus and take the test.

This is just a generally poor decision and I don’t recommend it to anyone else who has a choice. I know that my score is going to reflect the fact that I am trying to do too much and in all reality, there is a chance that I’ll have to take it again. The idea of taking the LSAT again is quite defeating for a myriad of reasons. I’ll touch on those when I get my scores back and you guys get to watch me meltdown into a horrible spiral of depression.

I have seen a little spike in the blog visits, so I assume people are using the LSAT Cacophony during their studies, which makes it worth while. I’m sure the visits will become more frequent as we approach two weeks and one week from the test date. Either way, you October and December test takers, I imagine there will be a new version of the file for you guys.

I’m going to go play with a few logic games, read the Economist and head to sleep.

 
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