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    Tuesday, June 22, 2021

    How to really install the WSL2 Linux kernel update package for x64 machines? Computer Science

    How to really install the WSL2 Linux kernel update package for x64 machines? Computer Science


    How to really install the WSL2 Linux kernel update package for x64 machines?

    Posted: 22 Jun 2021 01:37 AM PDT

    I thought I enabled the subsystem successfully

    https://imgur.com/a/74MBH1p

    submitted by /u/hwpcspr
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    How important is the principle of explosion of classical logic in CS?

    Posted: 12 Jun 2021 02:21 PM PDT

    I've studied logic when I took some philosophy classes and they were pretty formalized, even coming to the point of having to prove metalogical statements. Nevertheless, I can't imagine a situation in which the principle of explosion (that you can deduce literally anything from a contradiction) has some use in computation.

    submitted by /u/dhammapada186
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    Which option has more leverage in deep learning?

    Posted: 13 Jun 2021 04:59 PM PDT

    Hello, I'm 20 proficient in math. I'm starting college next year, interested in starting my own company. My dream is to make enough to live well and think well, with another dream of winning the turning award. Which combination is better for more experience in deep learning, Math and Computer science or Math and computer engineering. I've read most opportunities in future will come out of artificial intelligence, biosciences and energy. Do I really need more experience in hardware side for deep learning or cyber security, are certs like comptia sec+ enough for that purpose?

    submitted by /u/Zrothschild9
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    Reconnaissance Blind Chess - Join our NeurIPS Competition!

    Posted: 11 Jun 2021 02:24 PM PDT

    Create a bot for our NeurIPS 2021 competition in Reconnaissance Blind Chess!

    Reconnaissance Blind Chess is a chess variant designed for new research in artificial intelligence. RBC includes imperfect information, long-term strategy, explicit observations, and almost no common knowledge. These features appear in real-world scenarios, and challenge even state of the art algorithms. Each player of RBC controls traditional chess pieces, but cannot directly see the locations of her opponent's pieces. Rather, she learns partial information each turn by privately sensing a 3x3 area of the board. RBC's foundation in traditional chess makes it familiar and entertaining to human players, too!

    There is no cost to enter this tournament. Winners will receive a small monetary prize and authors of the best AIs will be invited talk about their bots at NeurIPS, the world's largest AI conference.

    Reconnaissance Blind Chess is now also a part of the new Hidden Information Games Competition (HIGC - http://higcompetition.info/) being organized by DeepMind and the Czech Technical University in Prague.

    Learn more, play a game of RBC yourself, and join our research community at https://rbc.jhuapl.edu !

    https://preview.redd.it/p22y6b6qep471.png?width=150&format=png&auto=webp&s=fbb3cd2b7ccdacf2758a9c0109112fc814ccd186

    Organized by:Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

    with

    Ashley J. Llorens (Microsoft Research)

    Todd W. Neller (Gettysburg College)

    Raman Arora (Johns Hopkins University)

    Bo Li (University of Illinois)

    Mykel J. Kochenderfer (Stanford University)

    submitted by /u/rwgardner
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    Weird Request: Anyone have a high-definition picture of the spine of a discrete structures book?

    Posted: 11 Jun 2021 05:33 AM PDT

    The book I am referring to is Discrete Mathematical Structures for Computer Science by Judith Gersting 7th edition.

    The reason I am asking is that I am putting together a short presentation for undergrads and I was going to photoshop a bookshelf of books I used or books I thought were helpful/unhelpful (I sold my book years ago so I cannot take a picture of it myself).

    A photo of the CLRS book spine would also be great (since I only rented that one).

    I am also not the best at photoshop so if you can please align the top/bottom of the spine with the camera then I would greatly appreciate it. Thanks! :)

    Edit/Update: Task accomplished! I am very grateful for your everyone's assistance! <3

    submitted by /u/DistressedPhDStudent
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    Ps USB Webcam help

    Posted: 12 Jun 2021 01:10 PM PDT

    i bought a pplay station webcam from a garage sale, it connects with usb, my devmgmt says i dont have the driver for it. driver easy says all my drivers are up to date, help?

    submitted by /u/BoxAhFox
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    Do Code Clones Matter? (PDF)

    Posted: 11 Jun 2021 02:48 AM PDT

    Understanding the meaning we make of the code we write can help create more nuanced and ethical software

    Posted: 12 Jun 2021 02:31 AM PDT

    Is database knowledge actually one of THE core competencies for people working with data in any way?

    Posted: 10 Jun 2021 10:50 AM PDT

    I have seen a lot of comments of the form:

    "You only need the absolute basics of SQL. You will learn all the things along your job"

    And there was an professor who said something like this:

    "To have a profound knowledge about (scalable) databases with their architecture/design is very high on the list of core competencies every cs major should have. It will not only help you working with databases but basically in every other field."

    submitted by /u/Peter2448
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    It's Alan Turing's Birthday on the 23rd of June, who wants to send flowers?

    Posted: 08 Jun 2021 08:10 AM PDT

    Alan Turing's Birthday is on the 23rd of June. We're going to make it special.

    Every year, people from Reddit pledge bunches of flowers to be placed at Alan Turing's statue in Manchester UK for his birthday. In the process we raise money for the amazing charity Special Effect, which helps people with disabilities access computer games.

    Since 2013 we've raised about £7600 doing this, and we'd like 2021 to be our biggest year ever. Anyone who wants to get involved is welcome. Donations are made up of £3.50 to cover the cost of your flowers and a £14 charity contribution to Special Effect for a total of £17.50.

    Manchester city council have confirmed they are fine with it, and we have people in Manchester who will help handle the set up and clean up.

    To find out more and to donate, click here.

    Joe

    submitted by /u/joereddington
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    Validating my understanding of NP-Completeness

    Posted: 08 Jun 2021 06:37 PM PDT

    I always had difficulty understanding this description below and the empty Venn diagrams that comes with it:

    A problem is said to be NP-hard if everything in NP can be transformed in polynomial time into it even though it may not be in NP. Conversely, a problem is NP-complete if it is both in NP and NP-hard. The NP-complete problems represent the hardest problems in NP. If any NP-complete problem has a polynomial time algorithm, all problems in NP do.

    Given these sample problem instances with numerical literals (nph-1, npc-1, etc..), the rest of the problems in respective domains represented with asterisk symbol (nph-\) and the directional arrows representing reduction of a problem to another. Is this a correct representation? The critical point is *np-1 can be reduced to np-2 but the rest of the problems in NP can't so np-2 is not NP-complete.

    https://preview.redd.it/k4btwhn7x4471.png?width=862&format=png&auto=webp&s=c133741989d4e5991abe5d2bd048f5411c16774b

    submitted by /u/yaplao
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