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Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 5:38 pm
by 10052014
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Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 5:40 pm
by paglababa
jaylawyer09 wrote:I just got these pts organised by question type off amazon used (PS), and they have some writing in pencil, and some in pen.
Any suggestions on what to do with the pen markings? circle the other answers with pen, or just disregard them while doing pts etc..?
Any replies are appreciated.
hard to ignore. circle the other answers with the same pen color.
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Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 5:48 pm
by 10052014
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Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 6:02 pm
by Clearly
jaylawyer09 wrote:Thanks,
just makes me ponder that there are actually retards who apply to ls. (Who circles in PEN!, especially if you are going to do the questions again...)
Any other solutions?
lol Relax, people can circle with whatever they want, it's their book! Equally scary is the person who paid to buy stuff other people circled in pen.
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Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 6:11 pm
by 10052014
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Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 6:33 pm
by 10052014
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Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 9:59 pm
by paglababa
lol, i would say this is the dumbest thread I've ever seen, but we all know that wouldn't be true here at TLS.
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 10:01 pm
by Br3v
I re used some of my PTs once. I went back through and circled every answer choice and underlined random words in the quesrion then erased everything lol. Probably Gould have just bought new ones but oh well.
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 12:31 am
by jcccc
You should use white-out on the pen markings.
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 9:59 am
by paglababa
This is why I have reprintable PDFs instead.
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 6:45 pm
by SteelPenguin
paglababa wrote:This is why I have reprintable PDFs instead.
Titcr
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 7:53 pm
by magickware
Spread the word everyone.
Only buy material from cambridgeLSAT.
It really peeves me off that CambridgeLSAT is licensed to sell their stuff in PDF form while LSAC still sell printed ones only.
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 8:51 pm
by Clearly
magickware wrote:Spread the word everyone.
Only buy material from cambridgeLSAT.
It really peeves me off that CambridgeLSAT is licensed to sell their stuff in PDF form while LSAC still sell printed ones only.
Cambridge isn't the only place to buy pdfs...
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 9:44 pm
by magickware
Clearlynotstefan wrote:magickware wrote:Spread the word everyone.
Only buy material from cambridgeLSAT.
It really peeves me off that CambridgeLSAT is licensed to sell their stuff in PDF form while LSAC still sell printed ones only.
Cambridge isn't the only place to buy pdfs...
Oh?
Where else can you get them?
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 9:48 pm
by Clearly
lsatblog
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Wed Jul 24, 2013 10:08 pm
by ScottRiqui
I wonder how much it would cost to license all of the PTs from LSAC? I'm picturing a computer program where you could tell it "give me 25 LR questions, difficulty 3 or greater", or even just have it feed you one question after another, adjusting the type/difficulty depending on how you do on the previous questions. Or you could tell it "generate a full-length PT comprised solely of difficulty X questions" (although converting the raw score to a scaled score would be difficult).
Re: Writing in used lsat books...
Posted: Thu Jul 25, 2013 1:38 am
by Jeffort
ScottRiqui wrote:I wonder how much it would cost to license all of the PTs from LSAC? I'm picturing a computer program where you could tell it "give me 25 LR questions, difficulty 3 or greater", or even just have it feed you one question after another, adjusting the type/difficulty depending on how you do on the previous questions. Or you could tell it "generate a full-length PT comprised solely of difficulty X questions" (although converting the raw score to a scaled score would be difficult).
You have to pay a decently large amount up front that goes towards whatever your actual licensing fees for sold/distributed copies ends up being at the first accounting after you've been selling product.
You'd have fun trying to come to some sort of agreement with LSAC to get an electronic license to deliver LSAT questions custom sorted in custom quantities on demand from a database via the internet. That plus doing it in a way LSAC would allow that makes piracy hard(er) would be tricky. Fun idea though.