I'm doing engineering so I can't really speak for any of the allied health degrees but generally speaking, if you want to do med, that's 10+ years of studying and dedicating your time to IT seems a bit odd since it wouldn't really align with a med career?
Aiming to do a very specialised and difficult degree (med with focus on neuroscience) but you want to go into science with a bit of IT? Are you sure?
Going into allied health and pivoting to med later would be a better option imo
It's good to be mindful of the future especially if you want an early retirement
Besides, it's not like your super balance is locked until you're 65 or something; if you exceed the balance cap which is currently like 1.7mil, you can withdraw any excess from earnings as a lump sum and you can...
Unless they mean daytrading ( 💀 ), investing in ETFs aren't a bad idea as a retirement fund
but tbf at that point, just put money into a super since it's tax advantaged
No. Read the second part of the question
The plane is supposed to angle itself to counteract the 100km/h crosswind from the east
Meaning sin(theta) = 100/300
Theta = 19.5
Keep the job man, 5-8pm on weekends is nothing and the experience at working there will really be helpful to you in the future
imho, I would've had an extremely hard time making friends in uni if I hadn't learnt the soft skills from work
unsw and usyd doesn't do early entry, you can see if their gateway programs apply to you though which will make it easier to get admission
It doesn't hurt to apply for early entry at uts; if you get in, you get in, if you don't, then you don't. No point in stressing
you're literally deriving the physics equations if you do it the integration way so there shouldn't be anything wrong
but on the other hand, integration isn't a part of the physics syllabus so it's up to you if you want to use it, i'll probably stick to the given equations just to be safe
should be C imo, if we think of Y as being stationary then X should be moving away, not towards Y
it's a stupid question, just move on, there's not even an axis to even base the velocity vectors on
Sounds about right ye, 8-9
But from what I've heard, most people that are 3rd+ year only take 2 courses per term since they become really challenging and/or time consuming, especially if you want to graduate with a good wam