For those taking a "theoretical computer science" class, and want some help in preparing for your final exam, I will be streaming the entire course over the next few weeks. Computer Science |
- For those taking a "theoretical computer science" class, and want some help in preparing for your final exam, I will be streaming the entire course over the next few weeks.
- Falsehoods CS Students (Still) Believe Upon Graduating
- The Man Who Carried Computer Science on His Shoulders – Krzysztof Apt – Inference
- What are some common software interview questions which can be made increasingly more difficult? For example, two sum can be turned to three sum.
- Wanted to share a cool resource: Where in the World is AI Map, an interactive web visualization to highlight 300+ helpful and harmful AI cases worldwide.
- [Research] ‘Bridging Visual Representations’ Decoder Integrates CV Object Detection Frameworks
- Will Autonomous Vehicles Really Revolutionize Our cities? - CLOUDit-eg
- The 'dangers' of curiosity in programming | project ground-up
Posted: 02 Nov 2020 04:01 AM PST The first stream link is https://youtu.be/bK8LVFWA0L8, and will occur this Sunday at 10AM EST. I am a professor who has taught this course quite a bit before, and always am wanting to help as many students as possible in it. I run this YouTube channel as well. Let me know if you have any questions on any topics I can cover to make things clearer, or any problems you want to go over. I would appreciate if you shared this with any of your colleagues taking this class as well, as it may help them greatly. See you Sunday! [link] [comments] |
Falsehoods CS Students (Still) Believe Upon Graduating Posted: 03 Nov 2020 01:55 AM PST |
The Man Who Carried Computer Science on His Shoulders – Krzysztof Apt – Inference Posted: 02 Nov 2020 10:36 PM PST |
Posted: 02 Nov 2020 10:12 PM PST |
Posted: 02 Nov 2020 10:08 AM PST |
[Research] ‘Bridging Visual Representations’ Decoder Integrates CV Object Detection Frameworks Posted: 02 Nov 2020 10:25 AM PST A new paper from the Institute of Automation, CAS, and Microsoft Research Asia presents a novel attention-based decoder module designed to better integrate different computer vision (CV) object representations. Read more: 'Bridging Visual Representations' Decoder Integrates CV Object Detection Frameworks The paper RelationNet++: Bridging Visual Representations for Object Detection via Transformer Decoder has been accepted by NeurIPS 2020 and is on arXiv. The codes will soon be made available on GitHub. [link] [comments] |
Will Autonomous Vehicles Really Revolutionize Our cities? - CLOUDit-eg Posted: 02 Nov 2020 09:52 AM PST |
The 'dangers' of curiosity in programming | project ground-up Posted: 02 Nov 2020 09:49 AM PST Recently I haven't been able to get anywhere while programming. Whenever I start something I wonder more and more about it. I've been coding as a hobby for about two years now. Most-likely would be my profession except for the fact that I'm not eligible for most jobs due to the fact that I'm only 13. I recently have been noticing that when I start coding a project, I go backwards. It started with me wanting to make a game in the terminal. Then wondering how game-engines such as unity worked. After that somehow I progressed over to how a programming language works and did lots of research into my own. Finally I reached as far down as I could get by wanting to build my own programming language. If I could complete all of this, this would be a great mindset to have. Obviously all of this is too much work for one person, especially a 13 year old who has only two years of experience. In the past few weeks I've noticed that if I train my brain correctly to not jump rabbit hole to rabbit hole that maybe this curiosity could turn into something well... less like a train wreck. So I started a project called "project ground-up", which was me using the next few years from taking nothing but a programming language and building it all the way up to a fully-functional operating system. I started a subreddit to document the process ( r/groundup ) and have learned so much. I finally have motivation to complete some of my most challenging and enduring projects. I'm currently learning about compiled programming languages and will soon actually be coding my programming language. Once the coding has started I will start a github repo where everything will be open-source. TLDR; Extensive curiosity can be good if you train your brain to use it properly. And now I have motivation to complete my programming language and operating system. ( r/groundup ) [link] [comments] |
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