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    Tuesday, April 7, 2020

    I have started a new Youtube channel about making the "theory" classes in CS as easy as possible. Computer Science

    I have started a new Youtube channel about making the "theory" classes in CS as easy as possible. Computer Science


    I have started a new Youtube channel about making the "theory" classes in CS as easy as possible.

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 05:41 PM PDT

    (If this subreddit is not the right place to post this, I would be happy to know where would be.)

    I am a professor of computer science. Since I left my home university (ASU), my public page has disappeared, and so the PDFs of all my homeworks, labs, recitations, tests, etc. are all gone. I do have them all saved on my computer, thankfully.

    I have created a new Youtube channel, Easy Theory (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3VY6RTXegnoSD_q446oBdg), to help students with the "undergraduate theory" class, to understand concepts from that class in the easiest way possible.

    I would appreciate if you subscribe, and even if you don't, I hope you and others will benefit from this effort to help students in CS Theory who cannot benefit from my course materials any more.

    submitted by /u/ryandoughertyasu
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    Narrow AI. What it is and why you should know the term.

    Posted: 07 Apr 2020 01:39 AM PDT

    Looking to collaborate on software with other devs so I started /r/ProgrammingPals.

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 11:39 AM PDT

    I've been writing software professionally and as a hobby for a few years. A year ago I realized I was working on projects solo without much input from other devs - so I started r/ProgrammingPals as a way to connect with more developers, build cool software, and learn new things. I've kinda always struggled asking for help and I still do, but it feels nice having a group of more experienced developers to turn to who also get pumped about building and shipping software. Just wanted to extend the invite for other devs here that might be on a similar boat.

    submitted by /u/Roybot93
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    ProbMinHash – A Class of Locality-Sensitive Hash Algorithms for the (Probability) Jaccard Similarity

    Posted: 07 Apr 2020 02:44 AM PDT

    Face Recognition Door Lock using Python

    Posted: 07 Apr 2020 01:50 AM PDT

    How i Build Face Recognition Door Lock

    Must watch 🔥🔥🔥

    https://youtu.be/mD8JOTDlbXE

    Code Link https://github.com/Arbazkhan4712/Face-Recognition-Door-Lock-with-AWS-Rekognition-Raspberry-Pi3

    In this video i have shown the process of making a facial recognition door lock using Raspberry Pi , Python & AWS Rekognition service

    Visit for More https://arbaazkhan.ml/

    Share & Support

    submitted by /u/getsetcoding47
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    Finally fixed my game

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 10:54 PM PDT

    TL;DR— I finally fixed a bug after two weeks

    My game, a super smash bro's knock-off based around my close friends, has had a weird bug for the past 2 weeks. Basically, a move where a player swings a putter over his head, much like an axe, was registering as a hit whenever the player would use the move, even if it didn't hit the target.

    All other moves worked fine with collision detection, just for some reason not this one.

    I started to texts my friends that I was giving up, when I decided to give it the old college try. I finally fixed the bug, and I couldn't be happier!

    Lesson learned: just keep pushing and something good will come.

    submitted by /u/Real_MichaelCera
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    Gate Examination 2020 (Computer Science). Almost a 100000 people in India give this exam annnually for top 300 seats at coveted IIT's . One needs to score about anything above 60 marks to get in the top 300. Undergrads usually prepare a year or two for this examination

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 10:47 PM PDT

    Is Software Engineering for me?

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 06:45 PM PDT

    **A bit of background (feel free to skip this):**

    I've always loved technology, I've been working with computers since I was little. Obviously, at first it was just playing games, but then I naturally started learning about fixing various problems, hardware, software, etc...I became quite good with computers mainly as far as "fixing anything" is concerned (you know, like when your mum asks you how to open a PDF file...)So I went to study CompSci at uni and it seems I really do have a little advantage - I understand the concepts a bit more easily because I've dealt with them, I am already quite familiar with programming and many other things. I also work as an "IT specialist" for company where I deal with basic IT stuff, like installing software and basically fixing anything that breaks (just anything IT related).Obviously, in my course, there are people much better than me, these hardcore programmers that have been doing this since they were born or idk... But still, I think I'm better then average.I'm not being overconfident.

    **The problem:**

    Therefore, the next step for me is to find an internship. Obvious role was a Software Engineer/Developer.Okay, from the requirements, I found out I still don't know a lot of stuff - that's normal, I expected and I am ready to learn more and more. But the more I read about it, the more it felt like I know nothing. No chance I would get the job.

    Okay, so maybe pure software isn't for me - after all, my experience is more general since I am interested in networks, graphics, security, hardware, ... as well. So I looked for other IT positions, but the result was the same - it was unbelievably overwhelming how much I don't know. After all these years, it feels like I'm basically at the same level as my peers. Like, what was the point then? If I know so little after so many years, how long would it take to be able to get any job?

    Now, don't get me wrong, I obviously know there's always infinite number of things to learn. But given my experience, I would expect that I'd be able to get a basic job within the IT field.

    Does anyone have the same experience? Am I really still not good enough or do I just look for wrong position?

    submitted by /u/callum_grey
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    Models to identify individuals who are at the greatest risk for severe complications due to COVID-19

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 07:58 PM PDT

    COBOL in 5 minutes

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 05:49 PM PDT

    How many functions are possible from three x-intercepts

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 10:10 AM PDT

    [R] Improving Image Matching: New Open-Source Benchmark with 30K Images

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 01:42 PM PDT

    Google Research collaborated with a team of researchers from UVIC, CTU, and EPFL on the new benchmark for wide-baseline image matching, which includes a 30k image dataset with depth maps and accurate pose information. The entire project is open source.

    Quick read: Improving Image Matching: New Open-Source Benchmark with 30K Images

    The original is here: Image Matching across Wide Baselines: From Paper to Practice

    The team is going to hold a 2020 Image Matching Challenge at CVPR 2020.

    submitted by /u/Yuqing7
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    Group Anagrams Leetcode 6th day programming challenge in C#

    Posted: 06 Apr 2020 07:45 AM PDT

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