3rd world medical students who are studying from worn out medical books, studying in the dark due to daily electricty cuts, working in hospitals with no AC and ventilation, studying by pen and paper and only having enough money and time to eat once a day. This comment is for you. Hardwork despite the discomfort is heroic at most. Keep on working.
Pro tip. On windows machines you can split the screen by minimizing your window and pulling it to the side of the monitor. Obviously works better with a large monitor.
Respect to Dr. J for delving into the secrets of tea making. Serious game changer, especially once you learn about temperature control and resteeping. I, on the other hand, chose to specialize in pizza perfection 🥰. Got an Ooni Koda 16 and can no longer eat franchise pizza anymore lol. I really think it's important for aspiring docs to be good at -or at least enjoy - something outside medicine. Having multiple skills and hobbies just serves to enrich your life as an individual and can even serve as a saving grace when med school and residency hit hard
🎉Congratulations!!!!🎊 I don't know who you are or where you are...but hope this comment brings a big smile to your face!!!!! Party hard!!!!!!🎊🎊🎊🎊 Best of luck with your future!!!!!😊
I guess he meant a chair with a good height suiting you so you don't end up slouching and feel comfortable and a good distance from you and the monitor so your eyes' health is checked.
Mrs Catherina is obviously the best, i studied her questions and answers just in 5 days and I passed, the materials she provided was exactly the questions I saw on my test day
It's not about watching videos here on RU-vid and wasting your time on materials and reviews that won't help, I was ignorant doing so till I got recommended to Mrs Catherina Moore, some how watching videos helped me too because without watching them i wouldn't have known about Mrs Catherina
I'm not here to converse for her but to share my testimony for what I confirmed, she's trustworthy and best option ever seen, thanks Mrs Moore God bless you
Hey doc! I was wondering if you would be able to do a "so you want to be a pharmacist" I'm currently in my undergrad, but I have a reserved seat in the pharmacy school at my university through an early assurance program. However, I still have my doubts on whether this career is for me. Thanks!
0:45 I don’t exactly have two monitors but would multiple devices suffice? (Laptop for main work, ipad for notes, phone for looking up terms and additional information)? Edit: I watched a few seconds longer and my question was answered. Sorry about that
You might want a bigger screen time ahead. I have the ipad 7 gen and it works perfect and you can add an apple pencil later on. Plus it’s not as expensive as the air o pro. But get the 128 gb for storage, you’ll need it 🤗
Tecnically yes. But i would advise a bigger one (or a laptop besides it). I use an ipad pro (large one so...11,9 inches if im correct (like A4 Paper). There i can make notes on the lecture slides the profs gave us. And when working in the library i can easily use splitscreen to summarize or look things up whilst keeping my lecture slides open. Ofc smaller ones would also work, but not as well in my opinion. So if you want it as an additional device (for eg practicals or labs etc), then sure, go for it since the large one is well, a bit large to carry around in one hand for longer periods of time. To use it during lectures i prefer the large one by far. (Are you just getting into med school?)
@@MedSchoolInsiders Yes, they can handle it, but barely. That is the thing that I don't like about laptops, on top of the fact that they get obsolete pretty quickly. I personally think that I the long term, someone should invest in a desktop PC, both for the note-taking and venting, at least that is how I have managed to get through the medical school
Not eating will make you loose focus really really fast. And good luck with not cleaning, even non-allergics will start sneezing and it will be uncomfortable (not to mention gross) And yes...its a joke