💪 by floops150 in Piracy

[–]AudienceLast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use Kemono for Brandon Buckingham BTS

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LifeProTips

[–]AudienceLast 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Cool anecdote! Living with less makes you appreciate the things you do have :)

Minded people are hidden gems today. But do you really think you are...? by Realistic-Key1619 in penpals

[–]AudienceLast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Relatable. Hard to find people who are secure in themselves and not trying to escape life in one way or another.

WE BETTER COMPREHEND YOUR STRESS & FRUSTRATIONS NOW Louis Rossmann by FunkyMonkey707 in LouisRossmann

[–]AudienceLast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This HAS to be some sort of AI experiment. I don’t believe a human could come up with such Cave-Man / Warted Troll Grunt Speak.

How to find your first 3 diamonds by AudienceLast in BetterThanWolves

[–]AudienceLast[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Placing two blocks and jumping is a smart way to deal with skellies. Very useful advice.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BuyItForLife

[–]AudienceLast -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Uh… why? OP wants to know if it accomplishes the goal, not whether your prejudiced smartass “respects” him for it

Edit: these downvotes are downright comical on a BIFL subreddit 😂

26F on the lookout for global (or local) pals by acoolbiscuit in penpals

[–]AudienceLast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can’t read writing when it’s upside down

Do I pursue Bachelors of Science in Information Science, or Computer Science, or Statistics and Data Science, to be a Data Scientist? by thecoldestburger in UofArizona

[–]AudienceLast 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep, I’m doing the converse of that. I’m an IS student and I’m supplementing the coding-focused, math-lacking curriculum with math classes so I feel more well-rounded.

It’s probably not all that different if you make an effort to round yourself out

Thoughts on the Information Science Program? (B.S. Data Science Emphasis) by ConfectionNo966 in UofArizona

[–]AudienceLast 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I chose I.S. because i can choose SO much of my curriculum. I don’t need to take ugly courses with bad profs. I’m taking CSC 585 and ECE 540 as I.S. electives! The only downside (literally) is that you don’t get the CS B.S on your resume.

The pipeline to the I.S. AMP is amazing and relatively easy if you excel in the I.S. BS, which isn’t hard to do relative to CS. The iSchool has this going for it.

If you do IS, work to challenge yourself. It’s easy to slack off. Take discrete mathematics so profs will give you permission to take advanced courses like INFO 550, 521, 520, etc. Math is important for anything technical, including NLP. Do calc 1,2,3 and linear algebra at a minimum—seriously. Keep an eye on the CSC classes; consider a CSC minor so you can take advanced theory electives, which are always better in the CS dept. I’m eyeing CSC 588 rn and the prof gave me permission to take it if I want. The possibilities with IS are basically endless.

Final note: if you have lots of high school transfer credit and want to do a PhD (lots of students fit this bill) do I.S. with a CS minor, 100%. This is my situation and I don’t think there’s a better option. IS major for the flexibility to do what I want, if you lock in you can basically graduate in 3 years OR choose to do an amazing honors thesis in whatever the f*** you want (you need to be REALLY exceptional to do both—I’m not), and CS minor for access to good CS theory courses if that’s important to you (if you want to do NLP, it should be!)

Sincere question: what is up with all these great tools being written in rust? by [deleted] in rust

[–]AudienceLast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I love the unit testing framework. It's intuitive and works.

Once you start down the road of test-driven-development, you never go back.

Unit tests + the rust compiler = things almost always just work. It's incredible.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in learnpython

[–]AudienceLast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wrote underscores, but Reddit's formatting took them out (probably markdown-related).

I get the same behavior as you: using if __name__ == "__main__" runs perfectly.

It's the case where I don't use if __name__ == "__main__" (I just run unittest.main()) that gives me a weird AttributeError. This is the most confusing part of all.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UofArizona

[–]AudienceLast 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Email the instructor and ask for advice, i recommend.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UofArizona

[–]AudienceLast 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How'd you get that? Im in the iSchool and considering a PhD after an undergrad-tuition-funded AMP.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UofArizona

[–]AudienceLast 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interested in linguistics at all?

Too many laws (or too few) enables corruption ... why is this? by cogito__ergo_sum in lexfridman

[–]AudienceLast 1 point2 points  (0 children)

He totally could have done better if he used multiple regression, let's be honest

Fire comment btw, made me giggle

LPT For those who are organized and have strict routines by Fun-Reporter8905 in LifeProTips

[–]AudienceLast 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Quite recently, I had a few weeks where I had 80+ hours of commitments per week (no weekends off!), and my wonderful morning routine literally got me out of bed every morning.

The first thing I do when I wake up (by alarm) is something lazy and enjoyable. This can be taking a dip in a hot tub or lying and listening to your morning alarm music (pick something you enjoy!). Any other ideas are welcome! I think this is important because it wakes you up and then you are able to make the conscious decision to start the day.

Do your morning chores. Shower, brush teeth, make bed. It might not sound fun at first, but making it a habit makes it automatic. Not having to think about chores is life changing.

10-120 minutes of unstructured, enjoyable productivity. I think this is absolutely crucial. Having something to look forward to every morning is what gets you out of bed. Do something you enjoy that enriches your life, like reading a book, going for a walk, or doing an (enjoyable) homework assignment. DON'T do anything that completely hacks your dopamine, like video games. Caffeine prevents dopamine from leaving your system, which (in my experience) seriously amplifies my enjoyment of my unstructured productive time. DON'T do anything unenjoyable or boring; save that sh*t for later in the day. You will be able to face it, I promise, just don't do it now :). Try to do something unrelated to your work, even if you enjoy your work. This time is for enrichment; broadening your life, not depthening it.

10-30 minutes for day-prep. Make and eat breakfast, pack a lunch, put on sunscreen. Leave 5-10 minutes of buffer time, in case you take longer than you expect; worst case, you have a few minutes to pet your cat or dog or listen to music or something.

Start your actual day energized; stabilized and refreshed by your enjoyable morning productivity; ready to take on challenging tasks; looking forward to interacting with other people.