- Data scientist skeptical about data: "Data doesn’t say anything. Humans say things. They say what they notice or look for in data—data that only exists in the first place because humans chose to collect it, and they collected it using human-made tools."
- Project suggestions on C lang.
- What was that "quine wheel" code that transformed itself into another language, and then another, etc?
- KDD 2019 Announces Best Paper Awards
- Here's how I made the custom built AI for my chess variant sandbox game.
- Tencent AI Trounces Pro Team in China’s #1 Mobile Game
- (Question) What are some fields of study for a compsci graduate looking forward?
Posted: 06 Aug 2019 05:16 AM PDT |
Project suggestions on C lang. Posted: 06 Aug 2019 10:49 PM PDT I am a beginner, I want to make a good project or (research-based project) through a C programming language. Any suggestions? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Aug 2019 04:06 PM PDT I'm trying to remember. It was code that when compiled (or run?) Prosuced itself in another high-level language. And when that was run it would do the same thing into another language I can't for the life of me find it. Wanted to show it to a friend. Anyone know what I'm referring to? [link] [comments] |
KDD 2019 Announces Best Paper Awards Posted: 06 Aug 2019 12:27 PM PDT |
Here's how I made the custom built AI for my chess variant sandbox game. Posted: 06 Aug 2019 07:13 AM PDT |
Tencent AI Trounces Pro Team in China’s #1 Mobile Game Posted: 06 Aug 2019 10:15 AM PDT |
(Question) What are some fields of study for a compsci graduate looking forward? Posted: 06 Aug 2019 08:22 AM PDT Computer science is one of the broadest STEM degrees you can get. It can feel fuzzy as to "what" you are until you specialize in a specific field or two. I'll (try to) keep it brief. It may sound a bit pompous, sorry. Next summer, I'm getting my bachelor's in computer science as the top student in my class (although my university is far from competitive). I want to stay in academics, which I thankfully can given my grades, and work my way up to eventually become a semi-significant and semi-productive science person in the future. Yay for optimism. A pre-requisite to that is to absolutely love whatever field I'm working on. I know I'm not exceptionally smart, but like most of us, I could achieve decent things in a field of study that I'm passionate for. But I haven't found that yet. That's where I ask for help. What are some exciting fields of study that I might want to start reading up early on (and possibly do my undergraduate thesis on)? I'd appreciate if you simply listed some of your favorite categories. Additional info: I'm good(?) at and want to be close to mathematics. I lean toward theory as opposed to applicability. Thank you. [link] [comments] |
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