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    Thursday, April 2, 2020

    Help Graph Theory Computer Science

    Help Graph Theory Computer Science


    Help Graph Theory

    Posted: 02 Apr 2020 04:42 AM PDT

    hello i just found this question in a sample exercise for Graph Theory about Planarity and i'm struggling on where to start on proving this

    https://preview.redd.it/jp6xha3l6eq41.png?width=598&format=png&auto=webp&s=c996e4618c41563ccb5a4386bbbda330c5a695c3

    submitted by /u/Cykablyat824
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    Data Structures and Algorithms: University Credit?

    Posted: 01 Apr 2020 08:27 AM PDT

    Hi guys, I did some searching in the sub. Couldn't find a list of online courses which provide university credit for Data Structures & Algorithms (also maybe Linear Algebra while I'm at it).

    Long story short: Background in Economics / Finance / Construction. I applied for an MSc in Bioinformatics to pursue career change. The department admitted me, but the school didn't. Dean said I need to have some courses behind me. I spoke with the department head. He told me Linear Algebra and Data Structures & Algorithms. I am currently doing Udacity's online Deep Learning course and chugging along just fine. Need those university credits though.

    As an alternative route, was thinking of applying for the OMSCS from GTech. Hard to get into?

    submitted by /u/murphinate
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    Google DeepMind ‘Agent 57’ Beats Human Baselines Across Atari Games Suite

    Posted: 01 Apr 2020 09:35 AM PDT

    DeepMind's breakthroughs in recent years are well documented, and the UK AI company has repeatedly stressed that mastering Go, StarCraft, etc. were not ends in themselves but rather steps toward artificial general intelligence (AGI). DeepMind's latest achievement stays on path: Agent57 is the ultimate gamer, the first deep reinforcement learning (RL) agent to top human baseline scores on all games in the Atari57 test set.

    Read more: Google DeepMind 'Agent 57' Beats Human Baselines Across Atari Games Suite

    The original paper is here

    submitted by /u/Yuqing7
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    is a master's necessary to make good money in a comp sci career?

    Posted: 02 Apr 2020 12:21 AM PDT

    A while back comp sci used to be known as a high paying career that requires minimal post secondary education (only an undergrad).

    However, now times have changed, universities have become more expensive, entrances more competitive, and the workplace has also become more competitive. So the question is, nowadays would a masters be required to make the same amount Gen X makes with only an undergrad?

    submitted by /u/Strawberry1897
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    3 different convolutional neural network based models (ResNet50, InceptionV3 and Inception-ResNetV2) have been proposed for the detection of coronavirus pneumonia infected patient using chest X-ray radiographs.

    Posted: 01 Apr 2020 06:43 PM PDT

    The Impact of Python: How It Could Rule the AI World?

    Posted: 01 Apr 2020 10:50 PM PDT

    Master in CS without taking Algorithm class

    Posted: 01 Apr 2020 03:20 PM PDT

    Hi, I got accepted into an online Master of Computer Science program offered by UIUC. However, I came from a non-CS background (I did bachelor in Civil Engineering), so I never took any of the core CS classes except for Data Structure (which covered some elementary algorithms like search on graphs and trees). Unfortunately, the online program by UIUC doesn't offer courses that cover algorithms in more depth (like this course: CS473) to their online students, so I'm currently self-learning the concepts from various MOOCs and YouTube videos.

    I've read that knowing algorithms can be very important for software engineering jobs. As long as I understand the concepts, do potential employers care that I don't have those advanced algorithms courses listed on my transcript? How about if I want to pursue a PhD in the future? Do you recommend me taking the algorithm class offered by my local college?

    Thanks in advance!

    submitted by /u/Nomatterhow101
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    What do you guys think makes a good software engineer?

    Posted: 01 Apr 2020 10:23 AM PDT

    What characteristics/resources does a good software engineer posses that differs him from someone learning code as a hobby?

    submitted by /u/10macattack
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    The early history of COBOL -- ACM (1962)

    Posted: 01 Apr 2020 09:15 AM PDT

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