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    CompSci Weekend SuperThread (December 06, 2019) Computer Science

    CompSci Weekend SuperThread (December 06, 2019) Computer Science


    CompSci Weekend SuperThread (December 06, 2019)

    Posted: 05 Dec 2019 05:04 PM PST

    /r/compsci strives to be the best online community for computer scientists. We moderate posts to keep things on topic.

    This Weekend SuperThread provides a discussion area for posts that might be off-topic normally. Anything Goes: post your questions, ideas, requests for help, musings, or whatever comes to mind as comments in this thread.

    Pointers

    • If you're looking to answer questions, sort by new comments.
    • If you're looking for answers, sort by top comment.
    • Upvote a question you've answered for visibility.
    • Downvoting is discouraged. Save it for discourteous content only.

    Caveats

    • It's not truly "Anything Goes". Please follow Reddiquette and use common sense.
    • Homework help questions are discouraged.
    submitted by /u/AutoModerator
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    Deep Learning Improves Structural Health Monitoring of Civil Infrastructure

    Posted: 05 Dec 2019 08:21 AM PST

    What would beauty mean to a synthetic mind?

    Posted: 06 Dec 2019 04:19 AM PST

    Summer or winter schools for computer science students?

    Posted: 05 Dec 2019 07:36 AM PST

    I'm a second-year undergraduate and I've just been advised of a logic summer school intended for mathematics, CS, philosophy etc. students. This immediately sparked the interest of whether there could be a few more winter/summer schools near my place - obviously dealing with theoretical aspects of CS or foundations thereof.

    For reference, I live and study in Italy but moving around Europe should definitely be not a problem, provided such schools are interesting enough.

    Are there such events around, especially for the winter season?

    submitted by /u/al_taken
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    I need some professional opinions

    Posted: 05 Dec 2019 07:17 PM PST

    I'm a high school senior so I gotta do all the research I can about the right path to take after graduation. I have a large interest in Computer Science/Software Engineering and as for career plans, I really love the Microsoft campus in my town and the people who work there but I always have more research I could do.

    To the point: I've been planning on a bachelor's in Comp Sci but there's a new coding academy opening in my town and my mom and I are curious as to whether that would be more cost effective because it's less expensive than a bachelor's program but if it could get me where I want to be.

    TLDR Would a bachelor's degree or coding academy training be more cost effective for getting me to a Software Engineering/Dev career (like at Microsoft)

    submitted by /u/natasharomanova15
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    Benefits of creating your own OS

    Posted: 05 Dec 2019 01:29 PM PST

    Hi everyone,

    For some time I've gained an interest in OS and low level system stuff. Next semester I'll be taking advanced OS course which will have writing an OS as one of the tasks.

    I am just curious to hear from people that did write their own OS or work with low-level system stuff, what is the benefit of it from learning perspective.

    I know in general that it'll help you understand your machine on more profound level but I was wondering about any specific things you learned from making your own OS and in general would you say it was greatly beneficial for your CS knowledge?

    Thanks!

    submitted by /u/pequalsnpproved
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