hey guys,
i’m currently attending a community college here in texas and majoring in computer science/engineering…
i plan to leave this town in fall 2004 by transfering to a university in dallas (either university of north texas or university of texas at dallas), but i haven’t been able to decide on one yet…i’m planning to go and visit both campuses to familiarize myself with what they have to offer…
if any of you all can provide me with any useful information regarding UNT or UTD (which would be a better choice or whatever) i’d greatly appreciate it…
thanks…
Ow, my eyes!
North Texas has a good reputation in the Arts, from what I can remember.
Welcome to The Dope!
Does your fancy smanshy computer have a working “Shift” key?
Haha, Yeah man.
I’ll try to type out proper sentences from now on. It was just a habit of mine to use the 3 periods (…) in other forums.
Thanks for the info anyway.
Anyone else?
That last post wasn’t a bump, was it?
Anyhoop, I’d visit the colleges. Different colleges are good for different people. If we all had the perfect college, there would only be one college, wouldn’t there?
Well, before I say anything else, I must say you might get a better response if you use a more descriptive title, i.e. “Dallas Area Universities” or something like that.
This is especially important with region-specific threads like this one, as people tend to ignore threads that don’t offer a topic that interests them, and you could miss the opinions of a lot of people who have the knowledge to help you.
As for the question…
Well, I haven’t seen or heard much about either (I do have a high school friend who goes to UNT, but I’ve never asked her what kind of college it is). Personally, I’m spending a year at the University of Texas in Arlington before I transfer to the main campus in Austin, and would definately recommend you take a look at it, too, when you’re in the area.
Capt makes good point.
E-mail a mod to change your title. They may tell you to start a new thread and let this one die.
Either way, you’ll get more specific replies.