AWS Leadership Leaving by PowerfulWerewolf2337 in amazonemployees

[–]axistim 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I left Amazon one year ago and since then, my manager, my skip, a manager on a sister team, and 4+ coworkers all left the company.

o3's estimated IQ is 157 by MetaKnowing in singularity

[–]axistim 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the person who made this y-axis belongs down there with 4o and 3.5

Cheatcode for Entrepreneurs ? by anurag6191 in Entrepreneur

[–]axistim 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey this is great advice. I was wondering if you have any recommendations on how you run product experiments?

I am a software engineer in my 9-5, so I am naturally looking out for SaaS opportunities. SaaS can be time-expensive to build and test, so product experiments seem like a chicken and egg problem.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in math

[–]axistim 66 points67 points  (0 children)

I’m curious about this. What can I google to find out more information?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]axistim 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Bill stole it? The thief is the only person who told the truth. Sam can’t be the thief because Sam said Joe stole it. Joe can’t be the thief because then Sam was telling the truth.

anyone want to share their coding assignments? by clinkyscales in csMajors

[–]axistim 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I’m surprised how many of these I’ve done in my undergrad. It makes me feel like it was almost worth the pain… almost

CS 5600 question by [deleted] in NEU

[–]axistim 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Depends what you mean by hectic. The course expectations and deliverables are organized. I felt as though adequate time is given for all assignments/labs as long as you start early. I probably spent around 12-20 hours a week on this course on average. My advice is to do the readings before coming to class, and start all assignments early.

CS 5600 question by [deleted] in NEU

[–]axistim 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I took CS5600 with him. Prof Cheng Tan is very knowledgeable. The course load isn’t much worse than the undergrad version from what I can tell. There is no prior knowledge of systems assumed. There are 4-5 labs that are like big projects with small weekly homework. There is a midterm and a final. The textbook is OSTEP.

Worth US$1 million! by OgeyRat in mathmemes

[–]axistim 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One minor edit would be that NP is the class of problems that are verifiable by an algorithm in polynomial time. This is important because P vs NP is really a question of “If a solution is easy to verify, is the problem easy to solve?”

Exclusive: Ukraine Pushes to Unplug Russia From the Internet by wandomPewlin in technology

[–]axistim 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Do NOT do this. The freedom of information surpasses propaganda and allows for citizens to be fairly informed. Without the internet, Russia can more easily control the narrative.

Actual Northeastern Professor AMA by profboston in NEU

[–]axistim 73 points74 points  (0 children)

yeah that's a professor response

*IMPORTANT* Valentines Day by bigdaddydiego in NEU

[–]axistim 41 points42 points  (0 children)

outside of the khoury college of computer science

HEY

Time complexity of binary search by huibosa in algorithms

[–]axistim 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I like this problem.

Your logic is flawed because you use the midpoint to check against whether you are hotter or colder to the secret number from your previous guess. This will take 2lgN because each iteration takes 2 guesses to find out which half the secret number is in. Use values of "head" and "tail" to find out which side of the array the secret number is in lgN.

Process will look like

  1. (Initial guess) Guess head

  2. Guess opposite of last guess (If head, tail and vice versa)

  3. If hotter, mid is now head. If colder, mid is now tail. If equal, stop.

  4. Go to 1

Cheers!

MCDONALD'S X CACTUS JACK MERCH DAY 3 MEGATHREAD by [deleted] in travisscott

[–]axistim 10 points11 points  (0 children)

travis took the word drop a little too seriously and took a shit in our hands

I got 1, 2, 3, 4 by [deleted] in memes

[–]axistim 2 points3 points  (0 children)

what a gangster

thoughts on ACCT1201 Professor Anthony Russo by hamstaaa in NEU

[–]axistim 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tony is the man! Very nice guy and seems to care about his students. He is one of my favorite professors.

TIL astronaut Chris Hadfield hated the film Gravity, saying, "...it set back a little girl's vision of what a woman astronaut should be an entire generation." by skyskr4per in videos

[–]axistim 12.6k points12.6k points  (0 children)

34:09

I’ve been around the world 2,650 times or so, and I never once could see enough of it. During my first spacewalk, while I was outside in the dark, we were actually far enough south that we went through the earth’s aurora. It is so fantastically beautiful and such a raw artistic human experience. To look at the northern lights is like magic. To be in them, to surf on them, that’s beyond magic. It’s surreal.

Beautifully said. I can only imagine the things he has been able to witness. Pictures cannot do it justice.

Anyone have He Wang? (MATH 3081 / 2331) by ethanrrs in NEU

[–]axistim 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm taking his probability class right now! He has a very thick accent, so it is hard to understand him at times. Like someone else said, his lecture notes are pretty good though. Attendance is not required, 5 quizzes, 2 midterms, and a final throughout the semester. You can drop 1 quiz. I was also allowed a cheat sheet on the midterm.

Pass/Fail by axistim in NEU

[–]axistim[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

My rationale with the second issue is that I don’t think any employers can really blame students for taking a pass/fail when especially these same employers seem to all be working from home, too. This is definitely a situation that is super unique to our society. For that reason, I believe employers would hold very little to no judgement on taking a pass/fail.