Stuff 2 Bring

<p>Oh snap, I used to CampusFood.com all the time at my old college. Basically, you order your food online, they usually have a list of “partner” delivery places around your area based on the info you enter - they deliver, you pay. I’ve never had a problem with it. Seamlessweb.com is the same thing, except they have reviews and ratings from other customers. </p>

<p>I don’t remember if CampusFoods has that. I haven’t used that site in awhile.</p>

<p>I’m still confused how to how that’s easier than just…regular delivery?</p>

<p>Who said it was easier? You asked how it worked.</p>

<p>It seems like a good place to go and look at the menus, and then save yourself the “service fee” and order yourself.</p>

<p>IF you want that, then just use menupages.com They even have reviews.</p>

<p>campusfood does credit cards… and Taqueria takes campusfood. </p>

<p>That’s all you need for food</p>

<p>I don’t remember about CampusFood but SeamlessWeb.com doesn’t have a fee to use them. I think they charge the restaurants.</p>

<p>This is true, however, the restaurants listed prices are correspondingly higher. If you compare the menu items on the physical, paper menu that they give you to the Seamlessweb prices, you’ll see that they charge you more for each item online. well, for most items. harder to get away with the really small-ticket things.</p>

<p>Actually, I have compared the prices and their pretty identical (well, for this restaurant anyway). I prefer to use Seamlessweb because one of my favorite Chinese takeouts, even though I have the physical menu, well, I can’t understand a word they say on the phone. It becomes fifteen minutes of “could you repeat that?” That paired with my horrible cell reception…bad combo.</p>

<p>Plus Seamless gives a lot of coupons.</p>

<p>A big bump, but going back to the TV thing: I’m a huge TV guy and I don’t think that I can do with sharing in the lounge especially when I have one of my shows on that I religiously watch. But, do people think that the freshmen paying for cable are super anti-social? I still want to make friends but does having a TV in one’s room count one out in the social game?</p>

<p>It counts as being you. It’s probably more important that you are happy than fitting into what other people call social. </p>

<p>For what it is worth, the only people I know who have a tv and watch it regularly (aside from marathoning DVDs of tv seasons) are less social than the average. And you would be in the extreme minority (1/40-50 maybe more) if you paid for cable. Idk, if it’s important to you then whatever…</p>

<p>Realistically, you won’t have time to watch it regularly when it aires. Columbia requires a TON of reading. So unless you feel like you can read Augustine’s Confessions while getting your Jersey Shore fix, I don’t see there being much time for more than the occasional Family Guy on Hulu.</p>