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    Saturday, November 23, 2019

    🤟I made the most comprehensive Open-Source Computer Science Degree Computer Science

    ��I made the most comprehensive Open-Source Computer Science Degree Computer Science


    ��I made the most comprehensive Open-Source Computer Science Degree

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 06:35 AM PST

    👉Link: Online Computer Science Degree

    This project is the most comprehensive Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science curriculum you can find online. You will learn all the material of mathematics, programming, artificial intelligence, data science and electrical engineering courses provided by top schools like MIT, Harvard, Stanford, Princeton and more. You do not need any knowledge of Computer Science or programming experience!

    EDIT: the most comprehensive compared to all I looked at ( ͡° ͜Ê– ͡°)

    submitted by /u/harrisonnwells
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    Project Wars Competition

    Posted: 23 Nov 2019 12:53 AM PST

    GetSetCoding Project Wars

    Welcome to first ever Project Wars for the Programmer's

    Participate and the best Project will get a prize of 50$

    To Participate use this Link All Details are Mentioned here :- https://github.com/Arbazkhan4712/Project-Wars

    For More Visit :- https://arbazkhan4712.github.io/

    submitted by /u/getsetcoding47
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    What opportunities, if any, do you think would open up to a programmer if the programmer were multilingual?

    Posted: 23 Nov 2019 12:06 AM PST

    If you were, say, an American that could fluently speak English, Spanish, French and Russian, do you think that you would have some grand career/employment opportunities? Why or why not?

    submitted by /u/MyNameIsNahDude
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    How are Bosses in Video Games are programmed?

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 11:47 PM PST

    i was playing a single player mobile game, and as i was fighting the boss, i realized how good and effective moves the boss was doing. So how all these boss or bots in game are made? its probably not machine learning or some new tech as even in garbage computers, the moves are smooth. Is it some algorithm? some kinda of brute forces?

    submitted by /u/theconfusedCPU
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    Welcome to 7th CoSIT 2020.

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 10:22 PM PST

    International Conference on Computer Science and Information Technology

    January 25 ~ 26, 2020, Zurich, Switzerland

    Send your queries regarding participation to [cosit@cosit2020.org](mailto:cosit@cosit2020.org).

    submitted by /u/pachuaurohlupuia
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    When To Use Interfaces vs Parent Class?

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 12:25 PM PST

    I recently got introduced to Interfaces and I'm not entirely understanding how to differentiate it to a parent class as both seem to give inheritance.

    Rather than using Interfaces, I can just have my child class inherit an object from it's parent. How do I know when to make the object in an interface rather than a parent class?

    submitted by /u/UnboundPhantom
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    State machines as types?

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 08:29 AM PST

    Can a state machine be represented as a type or can it be modeled in category theory or type theory? I'm trying to google this but perhaps incorrectly. Thanks so much for your help!

    submitted by /u/josgraha
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    Ideas for data structures projects?

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 04:51 AM PST

    Kindly suggest a project with possible data structures implementation.

    submitted by /u/AbduSnip
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    Weekly Papers | Quoc V. Le and Kaiming He Look at Vision; Intelligence, Psychology and AI; Evolving the Hearthstone Meta and More!

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 02:17 PM PST

    An Open Source Stack for Managing and Deploying Machine Learning Models

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 04:17 AM PST

    When a team of data scientists working on a model, things can get messy cause data is constantly being copied across machines, tweaks are being made on an ad hoc basis, and eventually, you end up with a model you cannot explain or reproduce.

    DVC stores your model weights and training data in a centralized location, allowing collaborators to get started easily, while also tracking changes and ensuring an accurate version history.

    The following tutorial uses DVC to create a model capable of analyzing StackOverflow posts, and recognizing which ones are about Python. When the model is deploying as a web API (using Cortex), ready to form the backend of a piece of production software: An Open Source Stack for Managing and Deploying Models

    1. Set up your DVC project
    2. Export and upload your model
    3. Deploy your model with Cortex
    submitted by /u/thumbsdrivesmecrazy
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    Upcoming Medical Student, realizes training might be irrelevant in the future, how to prepare for AI deluge

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 10:58 AM PST

    Hi there!

    I'm an upcoming M1. Needless to say, all the reassurances about "empathy" and "creative human thinking" etc. have not convinced me a single bit that most of what doctors will do will be automated by AI in a decade or two, and at best most physicians will be glorified technicians/counselors with huge pay hits (matters more considering loans). I want to be in on AI research in healthcare so I won't get totally wrecked.

    TLDR: I have 7 months until med school starts. What can I do now/in medical school/after medical school, to learn the basics, considering I majored in a worthless Bio major in college?

    I was thinking of taking 7 months of stats and biostats before starting (useful in any case) with a tiny tiny amount of intro to python, and have been looking into Data Science Masters programs after my third year of medical school (specifically those targeting machine learning), but for example is there anything I can do while IN** medical school, like electives?? What is the best way to go about this?

    Thanks!

    submitted by /u/OperationBarbarossa
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    Interfaces with code inside them--is this a really bad idea?

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 10:12 AM PST

    C# 8 is adding the ability to specific default interface implementations (from MS docs: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/tutorials/default-interface-methods-versions). I understand the rationale (making it easier to extend interfaces after they're already being used). But it seems like a feature that can be abused and create a whole pile of OOP problems. Thoughts?

    submitted by /u/matthewpmacdonald
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    AI Is Tearing Up the Dancing Floor Again

    Posted: 22 Nov 2019 08:24 AM PST

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