Donald Knuth: Algorithms, TeX, Life, and The Art of Computer Programming | Artificial Intelligence Podcast Computer Science |
- Donald Knuth: Algorithms, TeX, Life, and The Art of Computer Programming | Artificial Intelligence Podcast
- What to expect in interview PL Theory
- Making road traffic counting app
- Are proprietary filesystem formats (NTFS, APFS) snake oil ?
- Guys Urgent Help in ML University Project
- Tencent AI ‘Juewu’ Beats Top MOBA Gamers
Posted: 30 Dec 2019 10:43 AM PST |
What to expect in interview PL Theory Posted: 31 Dec 2019 03:53 AM PST I am interviewing for a research engineer role in a company that is working directly in PL (of they style of Mozilla, Microsoft...). In particular, the team that I am applying for is very related to type checking, static analysis, compilers and formal methods. I was told to expect open ended questions (e.g. how to write a typechecker), however, there are plenty of things that they could cover and I don't have time to review all my textbooks. If you were interviewing a candidate for this sort of role, what sort of questions would you like to ask? Any advice is appreciated! [link] [comments] |
Making road traffic counting app Posted: 31 Dec 2019 02:45 AM PST |
Are proprietary filesystem formats (NTFS, APFS) snake oil ? Posted: 30 Dec 2019 12:59 PM PST Not sure if this is the best sub reddit to post this question, but as I am building a new computer which I intend to run Windows, Hackintosh, and Linux in a triple-boot scenario, it came to mind. For years the open-source world has had to hack support for NTFS, APFS etc to my knowledge. Do these systems really provide a performance advantage over say, FAT 16/32 ? It seems crazy that you can have a USB drive for example, formatted for Mac, and just not be able to read the contents on a PC without installing some quasi-legal additional software etc. Same with the old NTFS drivers for Linux that were read-only. Has the world not settled on an open format for filesystems simply because corporations want to keep customers locked into a particular eco-system, or is there really a good reason for these unique filesystem types? Thanks! -Kevin [link] [comments] |
Guys Urgent Help in ML University Project Posted: 30 Dec 2019 05:42 PM PST Hello Everyone! Me and My friends made video lectures as part of our Machine Learning Semester Project.Please check out the video once and please give reviews in comments section either positive or negative(constructive criticism). guys if you like anything we did pls comment & like on the video ,we are not asking for subs or anything ,pls guys the deadline is near and we have to show that people have interacted with our videos. First video of that playlist is at this link Second video of the playlist is at the link Third video of the playlist is at the link If you like what we did then plz comment(positive ,negative or anything),we want you guys to interact with us:- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOzlAREs0nZ0vR0xQ_vvl6A I will keep posting the next video of the playlist in the next post Your participation will be highly appreciated. Thank You for your precious time. [link] [comments] |
Tencent AI ‘Juewu’ Beats Top MOBA Gamers Posted: 30 Dec 2019 09:58 AM PST |
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