A single-cycle ARMV7 processor that I designed from scratch looking at the arm instruction set for a course. Main board, control unit, main decoder, register file, and ALU in order. Computer Science |
- A single-cycle ARMV7 processor that I designed from scratch looking at the arm instruction set for a course. Main board, control unit, main decoder, register file, and ALU in order.
- Online Anonymity Honours Project Ideas
- The most supportive lab you'll ever join is waiting for you on Discord
- NodeJS vs Python: How to Choose the Best Technology to Develop Your Web App's Back End
- Best way to get a feel of programming?
- Hardware interrupts in ARM Processors
- Chrome/Firefox Extension for showing *code* for ML/AI research papers directly on Google, Arxiv, Scholar, Twitter, Github, and more!!
- [R] New Google & Oxford Model Time-Shifts People in Videos
- Learn python3 for free
- Software as a service
Posted: 18 Sep 2020 05:36 AM PDT |
Online Anonymity Honours Project Ideas Posted: 19 Sep 2020 03:17 AM PDT I'm a 4th year CS student and for my honours project I've decided to pick a technical project that "could involve implementing some attacks against anonymity tools as part of an assessment, or designing your own anonymity tool". I have a few ideas, but I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for a cool project? It is only a dissertation, but I would still like to build a tool that people would find useful. [link] [comments] |
The most supportive lab you'll ever join is waiting for you on Discord Posted: 18 Sep 2020 06:28 PM PDT Hi everyone! You might not know me, but I'm thoughtsofaphd AKA PhD Diaries on Twitter. I've always dreamed of being in a supportive lab, and today I finally created my dream lab. Our virtual lab is the most supportive lab community you'll ever join, and I would love for you to be a part of it. This is my passion project. I have been thinking, scheming, plotting, and vision-boarding this to life. I'm nervous. I'm writing these tweets with shaky hands and hoping that you love it as much as I do. And if you don't - it's your community too. Help me shape it! We're already at ~1800 members and growing! I can't wait to see you there. [link] [comments] |
NodeJS vs Python: How to Choose the Best Technology to Develop Your Web App's Back End Posted: 18 Sep 2020 10:44 PM PDT |
Best way to get a feel of programming? Posted: 18 Sep 2020 06:34 PM PDT Hello, I would like to know the best way to get a real sense of what programming is like to see if it's something I would be interested in learning. Any recommendations? Thank you. [link] [comments] |
Hardware interrupts in ARM Processors Posted: 18 Sep 2020 02:47 PM PDT Hello everyone here, I hope u all are fine. I'm studying electronics engineering and my instructor give us an assignment "report" talking about interrupts in the arm, I have never studied the arm processor or computer architecture. Are there any references I can start by digging the information about the hardware interrupts. Thanks, in advance. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 18 Sep 2020 11:51 AM PDT |
[R] New Google & Oxford Model Time-Shifts People in Videos Posted: 18 Sep 2020 10:56 AM PDT "Timing," it is often said, "is everything." Our perception of an event can change dramatically depending on the timing of the human actions therein. In video, even the basic YouTube player can easily speed up or slow down a scene. But what if it were possible to temporally manipulate the individual characters in a scene, speeding them up or slowing them down independently of the rest of the action? A group of researchers from Google Research and the University of Oxford have introduced a novel technique that does just that, by "retiming" people's movements in videos. Here is a quick read: New Google & Oxford Model Time-Shifts People in Videos The paper Layered Neural Rendering for Retiming People in Video is on arXiv. The model's code will be released at SIGGRAPH Asia 2020, which runs November 17-20. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 18 Sep 2020 08:54 AM PDT |
Posted: 18 Sep 2020 05:45 AM PDT |
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