Gil Kalai's argument against quantum computers Computer Science |
- Gil Kalai's argument against quantum computers
- What the the pros/cons of sharding? What can be sharded?
- Program Lead Jake Lussier on Udacity’s New Flying Car Nanodegree
- Top Machine Learning Online Courses to Learn
- Presentation Ideas to Get Middle and High-schoolers Interested in HPC?
Gil Kalai's argument against quantum computers Posted: 07 Feb 2018 06:35 PM PST |
What the the pros/cons of sharding? What can be sharded? Posted: 07 Feb 2018 06:23 PM PST So far the general argument I've found online is sharding takes more resources to implement - obviously this is a super general answer and I would like to learn more. Also, it seems only search engines and databases currently use sharding - what are some other applications that can benefit? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Program Lead Jake Lussier on Udacity’s New Flying Car Nanodegree Posted: 07 Feb 2018 11:42 AM PST |
Top Machine Learning Online Courses to Learn Posted: 08 Feb 2018 01:55 AM PST |
Presentation Ideas to Get Middle and High-schoolers Interested in HPC? Posted: 07 Feb 2018 12:46 PM PST I'm giving a 20 minute presentation (10 minute talk, 10 minute demonstration) about some high performance computing related talk for a science far. This presentation will be to about 10 middle school and high school students who are already (somewhat) interested in computer science. Does anyone have any ideas that can show off some "cool" aspect of computer science while also being tangentially related to HPC? One past demonstration was calculating pi by randomly picking points and checking if they're within a circle. It seems at that age kids are starting to get interested in hardware, so maybe some simple number-crunching that seems impressive? It can be hard to see how powerful modern computers truly since we tend to only notice when a computer game has low framerate or takes forever to boot up. I'm in a bit over my head since I've never done any sort of outreach before. [link] [comments] |
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