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    Tuesday, November 13, 2018

    Where to learn CS theory fundamentals? Computer Science

    Where to learn CS theory fundamentals? Computer Science


    Where to learn CS theory fundamentals?

    Posted: 12 Nov 2018 06:26 PM PST

    I would like to brush up my CS theory fundamentals, such as formal languages, decidability, etc.

    What are good courses or books to look into?

    submitted by /u/pmpforever
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    Examining the current paradigm of artificial intelligence (with help from philosopher Thomas Kuhn)

    Posted: 12 Nov 2018 05:51 PM PST

    How Many Computers Are in Your Computer?

    Posted: 12 Nov 2018 09:46 AM PST

    Embracing the Laws of Physics: Three Reversible Models of Computation [abstract + link to PDF]

    Posted: 13 Nov 2018 03:24 AM PST

    Im lost.

    Posted: 13 Nov 2018 12:33 AM PST

    Hello guys. My name is Digvijay Redekar, CS student from India. I was very fond of programming. I remember I started c programming alot earlier than my peer, slowly progressing towards c++ and java. I used to love everything about computers and would think that computer science is life. Slowly I fell victim to CSGO and then with time I stopped programming and played counter strike for hours. From being my class's best programming to one of the worst is what I am right now. I didn't touch programming for 2years, I forgot all syntaxes, though I still remember the logics. I am not confident now and feeling too low. How can I get myself back up and get the same passion I had for CS and programming? I really need your help to guide me.

    Update: Are Udemy courses good for learning?

    submitted by /u/digvijayredekar17
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    Survey on the effects of geographic distance on the effectiveness of commercial software teams

    Posted: 13 Nov 2018 12:53 AM PST

    As part of a project for a course at University of Illinois at Chicago, I am looking at the effects of geographic distance on the effectiveness of commercial software teams. I am conducting a survey to gather information from people that are members of software teams. If you have at least one-year experience working on a software team with at least 5 team members, please take about 15 minutes to complete the survey.

    Take Survey

    Thank you for your input on this project.

    submitted by /u/Zal81
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    Does the Apriori Property of graphs always hold?

    Posted: 12 Nov 2018 08:14 PM PST

    Hi,

    I have been working on this question.

    Given a graph database D as a set of small graphs, the Apriori property of support means if a pattern is frequent in D, then all of its subgraphs are frequent. Consider a graph mining problem defined over a single graph G, where the support of a pattern P refers to the number of all the subgraphs in G that are isomorphic to P. Does the Apriori property still holds? If yes, give a proof. If not, give a counter example.

    The questions core is whether the Apriori algorithm works in this case or not. In my opinion I see no reason why I shouldn't work, and despite my research have been unable to find a counter example.

    Does the apriori algorithm hold up here? Or is this some exception I am unaware of?

    Thank you for reading.

    submitted by /u/JustCantChoose
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    Computer graphics class

    Posted: 12 Nov 2018 03:28 PM PST

    What is the point of learning computer graphics and would it be worthwhile to take a class on it?

    submitted by /u/WiggWamm
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