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    Wednesday, March 31, 2021

    Reasoning under uncertainty with a near-term quantum computer Computer Science

    Reasoning under uncertainty with a near-term quantum computer Computer Science


    Reasoning under uncertainty with a near-term quantum computer

    Posted: 30 Mar 2021 02:44 PM PDT

    Which subject I should master if I like math as a CS student?

    Posted: 31 Mar 2021 05:20 AM PDT

    Hello, I'm a sophomore year Computer Science & Engineering student from Turkey. I don't really like programming but I like math, I like solving equations and problems while I watch TV and I can go on for 20 hours a day like that without even noticing. I'm trying to chose which sub-field of Computer Science to learn and focus my career on: Data science, artificial intelligence, cloud engineering and so on... I mainly chose this department because I like math and people said it involves plenty of math but now all we do is write a program for a soda machine or a universal remote. What do you suggest?

    submitted by /u/heartsfordinner
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    Is it worthy to study master of information technology after bachelor in computer science for building career in teaching sector?

    Posted: 31 Mar 2021 05:17 AM PDT

    [N] Microsoft & Princeton’s Text-Game Agents Achieve High Scores in Complete Absence of Semantics

    Posted: 30 Mar 2021 08:49 PM PDT

    A research team from Princeton University and Microsoft Research discover autonomous language-understanding agents are capable of achieving high scores even in the complete absence of language semantics, indicating that current RL agents for text-based games might not be sufficiently leveraging the semantic structure of game texts.

    Here is a quick read: Microsoft & Princeton's Surprising Discovery: Text-Game Agents Achieve High Scores in Complete Absence of Semantics

    An early version of the paper Reading and Acting while Blindfolded: The Need for Semantics in Text Game Agents was featured in the NeurIPS 2020 workshop Wordplay: When Language Meets Games. The updated paper is available on arXiv.

    submitted by /u/Yuqing7
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    HUGECYCLE Problem

    Posted: 31 Mar 2021 02:21 AM PDT

    Hi, I have a question in graph theory:

    Given a simple undirected graph G = (V,E) with vertices V and edge E. The HUGECYCLE problem asks if if G has a cycle of length at least deg(V) /2 (half of the vertices or more). How do I prove that HUGECYCLE is NP-complete?

    submitted by /u/mendax135
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    App Development or Machine Learning for specialization

    Posted: 30 Mar 2021 09:53 PM PDT

    Hello, Currently at my 2nd year on my uni and I have to decide on a specialization track. I am currently deciding on either app development or machine learning.

    This really matterd to me, since itll define my future and its making me anxious about making the wrong decisions.

    Background of me: I have been coding for a while now like 2 years+? Still bad at it and learning. I've made a website with mysql and php and some front end. I also made a few android apps and games.

    Games have been my main inspiration, I have always wanted to make games, but dye to my parents not supporting me I went through CS. It wasn't that hard except tge math behind most stuff.

    I am very bad at math, high school i never bothered listening to algebra and precal and I do regret it now.

    Which specialization would be best for me?

    What stuff will i be expecting on both app dev and AI?

    Thank you for reading!

    submitted by /u/MonoVelvet
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    Computer Science YouTube Channels

    Posted: 30 Mar 2021 08:57 AM PDT

    Are there any good computer science channels out there on YouTube?

    submitted by /u/Sleepysss
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    An introduction to SSA and the phi function

    Posted: 30 Mar 2021 05:13 AM PDT

    A Complete Guide To Choose The Best Hybrid Mobile App Development Framework

    Posted: 30 Mar 2021 09:13 PM PDT

    how hard is Algorithms and Data Structures?

    Posted: 30 Mar 2021 05:21 AM PDT

    Hi. I'm interested in learning about algorithms and data structures, and that's why I picked up "The Algorithm Design Manual" and started studying it on my own.

    The first chapter was fine, but the second one really started to cause problems for me.In the math department, it's more than I've studied in school, but its not exactly rocket science.

    That being said, the exercises of the second chapter are really driving me nuts, I spend hours trying to solve them(and fail miserably), but I just find myself just copying every question into CS Stack-exchange, waiting for answers, and then boiling my brain trying to understand the solutions.

    I guess you can imagine what my progress looks like, barely an exercise a day. I won't finish the book in years if I go on like this.

    My question for you is, could you please offer me some advice to progress faster. Am I doing something wrong, is this how you went through it too?

    Also if you don't mind, could you please share your experience with hard subjects like this and how you dealt with them? Were there times you were so frustrated you just wanted to skip some chapter all together?

    Is algorithms really this hard or is math just not for me?

    Thanks.

    submitted by /u/Cysear
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