Room for one? Wow
- VonVulcan
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Room for one? Wow
(20:12) STRESSTEST: Im actually innocent this time
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- Sergeant Thorne
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If the walls were sound-proof, that would be a huge bonus. Mirrors are important. A nice cage for the government-fed liberals of tomorrow. Me, I want space!
You could line your [floor level] with those, though, and house students or something for extra money.
Sure saved a lot of space by putting the toilet on the other side of the looking glass... (second from last pic)
Edit: I wonder how it burns.
You could line your [floor level] with those, though, and house students or something for extra money.
Sure saved a lot of space by putting the toilet on the other side of the looking glass... (second from last pic)
Edit: I wonder how it burns.
- []V[]essenjah
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- Sergeant Thorne
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Re:
Ahh, the important things.DCrazy wrote:So what about the complete and utter lack of any functional work environment? AKA "Where the hell do I put my computer?"
Personally I'm a bit leery of moving into dorms (assuming that comes to bare financially). I'm used to living in a room that is roughly two times the size of a dorm room, on a 2-acre property. Now, the general idea of a dorm is to put you and ~200 other "you"s in the same building, and housing 2 twice the people in half the space that I'm used to. I don't think the city and I will bode well with each other...
- Foil
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Re:
I was, too. So I stayed at home for my first two years of college. Mistake... after I moved into the dorms for my Junior and Senior years, I realized how much comraderie and close friendship I had missed out on. Plus, I didn't meet my wife-to-be until I moved into the dorms.d3jake wrote:Personally I'm a bit leery of moving into dorms...
Dorms worked out just fine for me...though I think that was mainly because I managed to score a single room for three out of my four years. Even freshman year with a roommate wasn't all that bad, though. As far as space goes, you'll probably soon find that you really don't need all that much of it to live and work on a daily basis. My best advice would be to bring along only what you know you'll need or frequently use to school with you; if you have a bunch of general stuff lying around your room that you barely ever touch, just leave it at home.
(Also, you'll soon learn that your bed has many other functions besides sleeping: a couch, a study area, an occasional dinner table... )
(Also, you'll soon learn that your bed has many other functions besides sleeping: a couch, a study area, an occasional dinner table... )
Re:
Ummmmm, college has at least one more use for the bed..... I'm sure of it! Especially in co-ed dorms.....Top Gun wrote:(Also, you'll soon learn that your bed has many other functions besides sleeping: a couch, a study area, an occasional dinner table... )
Not for me, it didn't.
And I actually found my dorm room far easier to keep clean than my room here at home. You get to start out each year at school with a bare room, which means you get to decide exactly where every little bit of your stuff belongs. So long as you keep everything where it belongs, you never generate much of a mess.
And I actually found my dorm room far easier to keep clean than my room here at home. You get to start out each year at school with a bare room, which means you get to decide exactly where every little bit of your stuff belongs. So long as you keep everything where it belongs, you never generate much of a mess.