A python bot that attends your online classes for you and marks your attendance while answering in class using Speech recognition, Image processing and a bit of NLP. Computer Science |
- A python bot that attends your online classes for you and marks your attendance while answering in class using Speech recognition, Image processing and a bit of NLP.
- Where do I find mentors?
- Top Tips on Python Programming For The Absolute Beginner
- Knowledge vs Experience. What is your preference and what advice would you give me?
- [R] Applying Linearly Scalable Transformers to Model Longer Protein Sequences
- Awesome compsci resource!
- Can you build a Turing complete model using only infinitely many OR gates for computation and NOR gates for memory?
- What are some non reference/teaching books that you would advice related to CS?
- Where can you learn go program websites?
- Looking for a A&DS COURSE
Posted: 01 Aug 2020 01:09 AM PDT |
Posted: 01 Aug 2020 04:47 AM PDT I am a rising sophomore doing a degree in Computer Science in New York. I am looking for mentors to help me guide me in this field. I am interested in Machine Learning and AI and I am hoping to become a product manager in the future. [link] [comments] |
Top Tips on Python Programming For The Absolute Beginner Posted: 01 Aug 2020 03:11 AM PDT |
Knowledge vs Experience. What is your preference and what advice would you give me? Posted: 01 Aug 2020 02:44 AM PDT I am a final year undergraduate in computer science and engineering. I have seen my colleagues doing internships but when I confront them to have a discussion their knowledge seems quite limited and essentially unclear. I am not deeming them fools. My learning principle is that one should have as much knowledge as one can get i.e. one should not shy away from reinventing the wheels if they can make better wheels. My question is how do you strike a comparison between knowledge vs experience? If you had to choose one, which one will you opt? Does having more experience (like doing an internship where you design some software or implement ML models) better than having more knowledge(like doing very good quality research)? Which one should I opt for if I want to start a startup(based on AI)? All these are in reference to the computer science and engineering domain. PS - Your response will mean a LOT to me. Thanks in advance! [link] [comments] |
[R] Applying Linearly Scalable Transformers to Model Longer Protein Sequences Posted: 31 Jul 2020 11:18 AM PDT In a bid to make transformer models even better for real-world applications, researchers from Google, University of Cambridge, DeepMind and Alan Turing Institute have proposed a new transformer architecture called "Performer" — based on what they call fast attention via orthogonal random features (FAVOR). Here is a quick read: Applying Linearly Scalable Transformers to Model Longer Protein Sequences The paper Masked Language Modeling for Proteins via Linearly Scalable Long-Context Transformers is on arXiv. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 31 Jul 2020 10:42 PM PDT There's a pretty helpful coding discord called TechTok that has a pretty awesome community (that is super beginner friendly). It's active and there are professionals that can help with pretty much any programming issues. There are late night voice chats and even weekly projects that the staff sends out. Here's the link if you're interested! https://discord.gg/eabmnSc [link] [comments] |
Posted: 31 Jul 2020 10:40 AM PDT I know NOR can also act as memory other than the NOR boolean function. So my question is can you, if you can build a Turing complete computer using only infinitely many OR gates for computation and NOR gates for memory? How would you prove/disprove it? [link] [comments] |
What are some non reference/teaching books that you would advice related to CS? Posted: 31 Jul 2020 05:06 AM PDT Fiction, concept explanations, philosophical but in the heart related to computer science. What are some books that are not aimed to teach any language at all but still a should-read as a CS major? [link] [comments] |
Where can you learn go program websites? Posted: 31 Jul 2020 04:59 PM PDT Hello everyone! I looked on the internet for an answer but adverts for wix kept popping up and it got annoying, so here I am!! I am study computer science at (English) GCSE level right now and about to start A-level. I am really interested in programming and would love to learn to build//code websites from scratch as a possible career option. Does anyone know what programming languages I would have to learn first, and any good courses to learn??? If I posted this in the wrong place then please direct me!! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 31 Jul 2020 04:21 AM PDT Is there any online course which uses the algorithms design manual as their main book? [link] [comments] |
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