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- The Select monad
- Looking to start a new beginning in compsci
- [R] ‘We Can Do It’ – Geoffrey Hinton and UBC, UT, Google & UVic Team Propose Unsupervised Capsule Architecture for 3D Point Clouds
- Is part of Lamport and Lynch's chapter on Distributed Computing (1989) out-dated?
- Is the post about Chinese software engineer life removed?
- Learning Machine Learning | Week 1 | Machine Learning | Andrew Ng
Posted: 18 Dec 2020 03:53 PM PST |
Looking to start a new beginning in compsci Posted: 18 Dec 2020 08:06 PM PST Hi all, Im about to embark in comp sci as my major, and I have ample experience in math up to calculus and was wondering if there were any recommended ways to get a jump start over winter break before i classes maybe in january [link] [comments] |
Posted: 18 Dec 2020 01:47 PM PST When Turing Award Honoree Dr. Geoffrey Hinton speaks, the AI community listens. Last week, Hinton tweeted, "Finding the natural parts of an object and their intrinsic coordinate frames without supervision is a crucial step in learning to parse images into part-whole hierarchies. If we start with point clouds, we can do it!" The comments came with the publication of Canonical Capsules: Unsupervised Capsules in Canonical Pose, a new paper from Hinton and a team of researchers at University of British Columbia, University of Toronto, Google Research and University of Victoria, that proposes an architecture for unsupervised learning with 3D point clouds based on capsules. Here is a quick read: 'We Can Do It' – Geoffrey Hinton and UBC, UT, Google & UVic Team Propose Unsupervised Capsule Architecture for 3D Point Clouds The paper Canonical Capsules: Unsupervised Capsules in Canonical Pose is on arXiv, and researchers will release the code and dataset soon. [link] [comments] |
Is part of Lamport and Lynch's chapter on Distributed Computing (1989) out-dated? Posted: 18 Dec 2020 06:18 AM PST If I am correct, Lamport hasn't written a book on distributed computing. I am reading he and Lynch's chapter on distributed computing (https://groups.csail.mit.edu/tds/papers/Lynch/handbook-chapter.pdf) in a handbook for theoretical computer science. It was written in 1989. Is part of it outdated? Are there some up to date version or alternatives? I want to read Concurrency: the Works of Leslie Lamport, October 2019, https://dl.acm.org/doi/book/10.1145/3335772, but can't afford it. Thanks. [link] [comments] |
Is the post about Chinese software engineer life removed? Posted: 18 Dec 2020 05:17 PM PST |
Learning Machine Learning | Week 1 | Machine Learning | Andrew Ng Posted: 18 Dec 2020 10:48 AM PST Recently I completed Week 1 of Andrew Ng's Machine Learning Course and thus I wrote a blog explaining how it will be for anyone wanting to get into the course : https://www.thecsengineer.com/2020/12/learning-machine-learning-course-week-1-andrewng.html [link] [comments] |
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