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    Thursday, August 26, 2021

    My late grandfather's 1969 Master's Thesis(1/4) Computer Science

    My late grandfather's 1969 Master's Thesis(1/4) Computer Science


    My late grandfather's 1969 Master's Thesis(1/4)

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 03:23 PM PDT

    My late grandfather's 1969 Master's Thesis(3/4)

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 03:26 PM PDT

    My late grandfather's 1969 Master's Thesis(4/4)

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 03:28 PM PDT

    My late grandfather's 1969 Master's Thesis(2/4)

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 03:25 PM PDT

    Can someone suggest me a crash course in Computer Architecture & Compilers?

    Posted: 26 Aug 2021 02:22 AM PDT

    I just graduated from College with a CS degree and wanted to go through some subjects that I found cool but just left off because they I went on to explore some other topics I was interested in. I'm looking forward to brush up these subjects & have a solid mental note of each of their basic functioning. Thanks.

    submitted by /u/GeekyImbecile
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    Introducing the Blade Programming Language

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 07:26 PM PDT

    Hi all,

    I've been working on a new programming language called Blade for a couple of months now and think it's time I introduced it to people and get reactions and feedbacks. Plus, I need people to test it and find the bugs in it.

    The repository is at https://github.com/blade-lang/blade and the documentation is in progress and going great at bladelang.com and even though I wanted to wait to write everything before I do this before, I think it's best to get started with letting people know about it now.

    There are lots of tests in the repository and experienced developers can basically pick up the language looking at those tests and by reading through the bundled libraries.

    There's also a Visual Studio code extension for easy syntax highlighting in the VS code marketplace.

    Also, I am greatly wishing that I'll find some contributors through this post who can fix some of the things I might be missing on and who may as well be interested in contributing libraries to it. The process of doing so is really straight forward and I'm available to guide anyone through the process.

    Feedbacks are highly appreciated and treated with upmost priority.

    Thanks all!

    submitted by /u/mcfriendsy
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    If we have programming languages ready for quantum computers then why aren't we using them for something like AI, crypto etc?

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 11:12 AM PDT

    What is limiting us from doing that?

    submitted by /u/OrganizationWinter99
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    Calculus operations are computationally faster than linear algebra operations.

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 08:52 PM PDT

    How could I write an algorithm that compares the time and space complexity of mathematical operations? specifically, Calculus vs Linear algebra?

    submitted by /u/Foxy_tendies
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    We call upon Reddit to take action against the rampant Coronavirus misinformation on their website.

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 04:44 PM PDT

    What background do I need to study the game of sprouts?

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 03:11 PM PDT

    Sprouts is a paper-and-pencil game invented by the late John Conway (also known for having invented the Game of Life, in addition to his many contributions to a number of fields of math) and Mike Paterson. For the curious, Vsauce has made a video about it a few years ago.

    I have previously taken an undergraduate AI classes where I studied how graph search algorithms can be used for machine playing of games such as tic-tac-toe, chess and the like (BFS/DFS, A*, alpha-beta pruning etc.). However, sprouts is different in that it's set on a topological space. As such, the strategies that are widely used for the aforementioned games do not seem immediately applicable for sprouts.

    For those who are familiar with sprouts, what are some topics that I should acquaint myself with in order to study the game of sprouts computationally?

    submitted by /u/pazvant
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    Questionable New Website: Omicron.life

    Posted: 25 Aug 2021 08:12 AM PDT

    There's this new organization called Omicron.life that has been posting on some other subreddits claiming that they can predict depression among Reddit users by looking at their past reddit posts/comments. Apparently all you have to do is enter your username and then they will give you a "mental wellness score". They claim to use machine learning and natural language processing but I don't know much about that stuff. Can someone explain how it's even possible to use machine learning/ natural language processing to predict depression or is this website a gimmick. Here is their profile: u/omicron-life.

    submitted by /u/ConcentrateLucky1570
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