While preparing to send his first child to college, Jeremy Marks quickly realized that all the free “dorm essential” checklists online were incomplete. He spent hours and hours cobbling together a comprehensive list to ensure his son didn’t show up to school having missed something important.
Then there were more hours upon hours reading reviews and shopping for individual products. And the worst part was trying to organize when and where it would all arrive on campus since Jeremy’s son was attending school across the country. What needed to be purchased in advance? What could be picked up at local stores? What should ship to the dorm vs. mail centers?
Jeremy shared the massive Excel spreadsheet with his wife Julie, who nearly passed at the overwhelming number of items, product links, and tracking notes.
With their second child only a year younger, Jeremy wanted to make the daunting list of building a college packing list, selecting items, and managing the whole process of getting ready for move-in day easier for himself and other families.
So, The Dorm List was born to help rising freshmen and their families save time and money while reducing stress.
No features have been listed yet.
Based on our record, Discogs seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 289 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Yeah but those would be official releases? Like if you went to discogs.com, you would be able to find those, along with release date, tracklist etc. I don't think thats the case for the example I'm making here. Source: 5 months ago
They only have 2 songs on Spotify, and my friend helped me find a website where I can buy used copies of their CDs from other users, but I don't know that site well (discogs.com), so I am hesitant. Source: 5 months ago
I hear what you are saying about up-sampling and you are probably right to be suspicious. a great resource for checking this type of thing is discogs.com. Source: 5 months ago
This is a free generator for Jukebox title strips, with functionality to import track & artist information from discogs.com. Manually fill in the form, or copy/paste the URL from discogs, select any style options you like, then hit the button to generate. Source: 7 months ago
My father had an amazing record collection, it was all Jazz. I remember he had a Louis Armstrong song called "Everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die." I've searched and searched for this song and I see other versions (on discogs.com for example) but never Louis'. Source: 9 months ago