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#comp sci
meatball-joe · 2 days
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*describing CPUs* yeah this rock is haunted by the soul of a mathematician and controls most parts of the world. we use our spells to make it play Fortnite,
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simitposting · 7 months
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local-stray-catboy · 6 months
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butchdazai · 1 year
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binary-aesthetics · 27 days
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// March 2024
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almost forgot how well mind maps work when you have so many thoughts and ideas going on in your head and they are the perfect base for structuring and writing my assignment und MITRE ATT&CK and D3FEND frameworks 🌿
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codingquill · 7 months
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Essentials You Need to Become a Web Developer
HTML, CSS, and JavaScript Mastery
Text Editor/Integrated Development Environment (IDE): Popular choices include Visual Studio Code, Sublime Text.
Version Control/Git: Platforms like GitHub, GitLab, and Bitbucket allow you to track changes, collaborate with others, and contribute to open-source projects.
Responsive Web Design Skills: Learn CSS frameworks like Bootstrap or Flexbox and master media queries
Understanding of Web Browsers: Familiarize yourself with browser developer tools for debugging and testing your code.
Front-End Frameworks: for example : React, Angular, or Vue.js are powerful tools for building dynamic and interactive web applications.
Back-End Development Skills: Understanding server-side programming languages (e.g., Node.js, Python, Ruby , php) and databases (e.g., MySQL, MongoDB)
Web Hosting and Deployment Knowledge: Platforms like Heroku, Vercel , Netlify, or AWS can help simplify this process.
Basic DevOps and CI/CD Understanding
Soft Skills and Problem-Solving: Effective communication, teamwork, and problem-solving skills
Confidence in Yourself: Confidence is a powerful asset. Believe in your abilities, and don't be afraid to take on challenging projects. The more you trust yourself, the more you'll be able to tackle complex coding tasks and overcome obstacles with determination.
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izicodes · 7 months
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How to learn: HTML | Resources ✨
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Sunday 10th September 2023
I have come back with a new resource I've made! This time about how to learn HTML! I'm starting from the basics right now and working my way up of 'how to learn' info resources!😅
I've made a HTML resource in the past (one | two) but this one is a bit more detailed and has tips of how I studied HTML. I use HTML on the daily so though I would share my knowledge with more people. Again, just like my previous resource "Starting your coding journey", this is more targeted towards absolute beginners or for people who want to learn how to customise their Tumblr blog/Neocite! 👩🏾‍💻
Anyhoo, check it out and let me know what you think: LINK
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bunnydevs · 8 months
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cyanogen-miasma · 2 months
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nerd fight
my money's on geologist or engineer but I'm the one making the poll so I can't vote
feel free to reblog with reasons why you think your chosen STEM nerd would win in a fight against all the others
edit: for some reason I can vote
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official-torfmoor · 6 months
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Both physics and computer science are applied mathematics, but phsyics is when you take reality and find mathematics that apply to it and computer science is when you take mathematics and create reality to apply it to.
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janmisali · 11 months
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the "what number comes next?" problem
here's a sequence of numbers:
3198, 11, 734, 11, 1115, 11, 1440...
can you guess what number comes next?
that's right, it's another eleven! but what comes after that?
well, in this case it happens to be 1936. can you figure out the pattern? how far into the sequence could you predict?
this is a pretty hard problem, and in the most general form (I give you any sequence of numbers and ask you what number comes next) there's literally no way to solve it perfectly. the possibilities are endless!
but just because something is impossible to do perfectly doesn't mean you can't try. in the sequence at the start of the post, even though there was no guarantee that there's another eleven next, there's a sense in which that's the most "sensible" continuation, the one that follows the pattern most closely.
here's another sequence:
24794, 24794, 24794, 24794, 24794, 24794...
wouldn't it be reasonable to assume that the next number is another 24794? you might even be able to use some fancy statistical model to specify exactly how confident you are that the next number is another 24794.
but of course, without knowing the underlying meta-pattern that generates these patterns, there's no real reason to assume that any one pattern will be more likely than another.
so what if instead of just showing you one sequence of numbers, I showed you a lot of sequences of numbers? is there is a method of discovering this meta-pattern, assuming one exists?
the answer is, sorta! it depends on how many examples you're given and on how chaotic the underlying meta-pattern is.
so, you know how when you have a bunch of data plotted on a graph you can find the "best-fit line"? the closer the data is to being a line in the first place, the better this approximation will work.
defining a line only uses two parameters (mx+b), but the thing is that if you make a more complicated function with more parameters to play around with (as long as you're clever about it), you can define a relatively-simple mathematical equation that gets arbitrarily close to any data, no matter how messy that data is! you can just keep adding more parameters until you have enough to model the complexity of the given data.
now, the more parameters you have the more expensive it is computationally to find what configuration of all the parameters gets your fancy approximation as close to the data as possible (there are some linear algebra and calculus tricks that help!), but depending on the application, you can use this sort of method to get good-enough approximations to whatever data it is that you want to model!
however, this doesn't mean you've actually found the underlying meta-pattern. it's just a fancier version of looking at data you've already seen and drawing lines between points to interpolate between things. any approximation made this way will be in a sense "smoother" than what it's modeling, always predicting (for this application) that the next number in the sequence is the "average" in some sense of all the things that could come next, gravitating towards the most default and "boring" patterns.
anyway that's how chatgpt works
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meatball-joe · 3 months
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Computer science is such a joke. In what other field could you say "make sure the slurm daemon is active" in a professional context
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melanges · 1 year
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Waking up to cold but sunny mornings. Doing my lab prep while listening to subtle piano music in the background. Soaking in the sun during study breaks. Sweet fruity tea. Soft cushion of reading chair. Coffee shops selling flowery sweet, brightly colored drinks.
Spring is slowly making its way to the year.
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xiabablog · 8 months
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Just a reminder!
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I will be applying this to myself and even making my first YouTube video! Hehe!
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thesmegalodon · 9 months
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i’m a mechanical engineering student who’s terrified of programming ask me anything about compsci and i’ll answer it wrong
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rawro · 2 months
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the cpu and gpu are not enemies competing for your power supply's love in fact they are in a beautiful throuple and every time you hear the fans get loud when you play a game that's the sound of them fucking
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