Final year project Computer science Computer Science |
- Final year project Computer science
- Machine Learning for Predictive Maps in Python and Leaflet
- Is ARIS outdated?
- Multivariate Dataset Categorization
- I published this on how I believe artificial intelligence can help the world
- What would make a good spec for defining specs in general?
- Book recommendation for intro to automata theory
- Can AlphaZero Leap From Go & Chess to Quantum Computing?
Final year project Computer science Posted: 29 Jan 2020 02:56 AM PST So I should've started my final year project a while ago but I had mainly been doing research. Because I was/still am interested in Networking and security. I chose to do verification of a security protocol but now I'm not so sure I want to do that. It's too theoretical for my liking. I'll prefer to make something like an Android or iOS app. Or something I can make. Any graduates, students or Teachers have any advice for me? I'm proficient in java and Kotlin and some scripting languages . I don't know much python really. My technical resources I have are my MacBook, android phone and iOS phone. Please help, I'm starting to lose it. It's due in May [link] [comments] |
Machine Learning for Predictive Maps in Python and Leaflet Posted: 28 Jan 2020 12:01 PM PST |
Posted: 28 Jan 2020 06:48 AM PST Hey, so I learned about ARIS (architecture of integrated information systems) in one of my classes. Is this still a thing or is it outdated? [link] [comments] |
Multivariate Dataset Categorization Posted: 28 Jan 2020 05:19 PM PST Given several multivariate datasets, are there existing techniques that allow us to classify these datasets to its own category? For example, if i had dataset X, Y and Z, is there a way to approximate and say that dataset X is under gaussian category while dataset Y and Z falls under Poisson category. Im using gaussian and poisson because the only thing i could find in terms of categorizing datasets is in terms of what distribution is best fitted for the dataset. It then becomes more complicated when dealing witj multivariate datasets because each dimension might yield a different type of distribution. Any thoughts on the matter? [link] [comments] |
I published this on how I believe artificial intelligence can help the world Posted: 29 Jan 2020 12:41 AM PST Hope you enjoy it I believe it has such positive potential!!!!!!!!!!! https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=113410486877647&id=111549840397045&sfnsn=mo [link] [comments] |
What would make a good spec for defining specs in general? Posted: 28 Jan 2020 02:01 PM PST I imagine something like a recognizer function of a pair of bitstrings where each bitstring starts with utf8 bytes of a content-type (such as "image/jpeg"), colon, then binary content of that type, and the spec is which state transitions (pair of possible previous and next state) are allowed by the spec. For example, how might the specs of Vulkan and OpenCL and IEEE754-double and HTTPS and UDP and JVM and .NET and lambda functions and rule110 etc... How could each of those be described in some meta-spec? The main problem seems to be that few programmers can agree on what a "state of a system" is in terms of a bitstring or in terms of any common model. Tech is a big mess of incompatibility and we dont even have a common language that can even in principle describe if 2 systems are compatible or incompatible. [link] [comments] |
Book recommendation for intro to automata theory Posted: 28 Jan 2020 09:41 AM PST I'm currently taking a class on automata theory, languages, and computation and am using the textbook by Hopcraft, Motwani, and Ullman. While this book is comprehensive, many of the explanations are entirely proof based. I find this difficult to understand sometimes. Especially when it comes to apply these concepts to solving problems such as proving a language is not regular using the pumping lemma. Is there a good textbook on this subject that mixes in less formal, more practical or natural language type explanations? [link] [comments] |
Can AlphaZero Leap From Go & Chess to Quantum Computing? Posted: 28 Jan 2020 11:10 AM PST A new study suggests DeepMind's amazing game-playing algorithm AlphaZero could help unlock the power and potential of quantum computing. Source: Can AlphaZero Leap From Go & Chess to Quantum Computing? The Paper Global Optimization of Quantum Dynamics with AlphaZero Deep Exploration [link] [comments] |
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