Decomposing 1810's top hit with C++ and DFT Computer Science |
- Decomposing 1810's top hit with C++ and DFT
- [N] Oxford Novel Image Compression Method COIN: Better Than JPEG at Low Bitrates!
- Sequential consistency and casual consistencty ? - ELI5?
- Do you know any interesting computer science problems that have been solved recently?
- is it worth reading SICP(Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs) in 2021? Especially in my case, when I have read already one programming book and okay with the most basics. Or would it be more efficient to focus on other things?
- Are control lines for the same operations always the same? When do they differ specifically for Lw and slt in mips-32?
- Rs 27.7 crore Computer Research Scam at Indian University in 2002
Decomposing 1810's top hit with C++ and DFT Posted: 12 Mar 2021 01:24 PM PST |
[N] Oxford Novel Image Compression Method COIN: Better Than JPEG at Low Bitrates! Posted: 12 Mar 2021 08:27 PM PST University of Oxford researchers propose COIN, a novel image compression method that stores the weights of an MLP overfitted to an image and outperforms JPEG at low bitrates even without entropy coding. Here is a quick read: Oxford Novel Image Compression Method COIN: Better Than JPEG at Low Bitrates! The paper COIN: Compression with Implicit Neural representations is on arXiv. [link] [comments] |
Sequential consistency and casual consistencty ? - ELI5? Posted: 12 Mar 2021 04:44 AM PST I don't seem to understand this at all, at some point I kinda do but then I'm lost. Why is it sequential consistency if we have 4 processer, 1 and 2 do their own Write operation, but p3 and p4 need to read in the correct order? Is sequential consistency all about the processors that read / get a value? not about writing? [link] [comments] |
Do you know any interesting computer science problems that have been solved recently? Posted: 12 Mar 2021 12:14 PM PST I like browsing this wikipedia page: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unsolved_problems_in_computer_science So it got me wondering if this subreddit knows any interesting problems that have been solved recently? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 12 Mar 2021 03:29 PM PST Hi. I had previously read the "Python Crash Course" book. It is a Project-Based Introduction to Programming. I was thinking about starting to learn C++, from the "C++ Primer" book, or C, from the "The C Programming Language" book. As both of these 2 languages have interesting applications for me, such as: Game Development, Robotics/Embedded Software. I have some interest in Statistics, Data Science, Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence as well though. That is why I started learning Python. But at the same time, I am not very attracted to routine financial work in an office. So I'm looking towards some C++ applications, which are interesting, give more freedom and creativity. So, back to the question. Would it be wise in my case to switch to the SICP book? I've seen it recommended a lot in Computer Science related resources. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 12 Mar 2021 11:48 AM PST |
Rs 27.7 crore Computer Research Scam at Indian University in 2002 Posted: 12 Mar 2021 08:40 AM PST |
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