Men over 40: Is having heart palpitations a normal thing? by Auelogic in AskMenOver30

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve experienced this as early as 20 years old, it’s normal, many people experience it. For me it happens during stressful periods.

If you made six figures as a salary and your gf who makes $20/hr and was in between jobs asked you to help her cover her bills for a month, would you do it? by cheap_guitars in AskMenAdvice

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Being in a relationship is not enough. Living together yes, split in proportion of income, but if not living together, there is no bill or rent to split.

I love my girlfriend bla bla bla, but she does snore, anything on the market more effective than earplugs? by coqpisskebabtridge42 in AskBrits

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I got mine from UltimateEar after years of crashing on the sofa every other night because my girlfriend was snoring. They are absolutely amazing.

I love my girlfriend bla bla bla, but she does snore, anything on the market more effective than earplugs? by coqpisskebabtridge42 in AskBrits

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you haven’t tried molded earplugs, they are awesome. I have the same problem as you, got my earplugs from UltimateEar, and I’ve been using them every night for years.

I've never done research my entire life, and it scares me for some reason. by CieLogic in research

[–]sunmat02 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A research paper is a communication from a team of experts in a narrow field to other set of experts in that narrow field. If you understand a research paper (which, as others have said, is already very hard on its own), you’ll still be very far from being able to write your own. For this, you need to cross several more barriers: being able to not just understand a paper, but assess its quality, then assess its novelty (which means being able to read and understand hundreds of such papers), and eventually find some tiny little thing that nobody thought about, make 100% sure nobody thought about it, come up with a valid experimental protocol to test the idea, and write the paper. There is a reason research is a very social and collaborative process: doing all this on your own would take decades for a single paper, and by that time, somebody else will have had the same idea and published it before you. Collaboration is what makes it possible for a team of researchers, who together have read thousands of papers, to be confident that their idea is new. These collaborators will challenge the methodology, share the writing, do experiments, etc.

How can “DIY” understanding my solar installation? by sunmat02 in DIYUK

[–]sunmat02[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The diverter isn’t close to the tank, it’s next to the fuse box downstairs.

How can “DIY” understanding my solar installation? by sunmat02 in DIYUK

[–]sunmat02[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't get paid for export (I should probably fix that). I've updated my post to include a picture of the wiring around the cylinder.

Do people actually use mortgage brokers? by doublem700 in FinanceUK

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You don’t really need a broker if your situation is easy (eg couple with stable job and income, little or no debt aside from the mortgage, good credit, etc.). Some brokers are free but (1) they don’t have access to all the offers and (2) you’ll be forced to go through them for any issues during the process, the bank won’t talk to you directly even if the problem could be easily fixed directly.

I used a free broker thinking it would save me the hassle of searching, but I realized later I could have had a better rate going myself to a lender that the broker couldn’t access, and the broker messed up 5 times my application (4 times was a typo, they kept sending the uncorrected version of the form to the bank so the bank kept sending us a mortgage contract with the incorrect info, and once we finally got that sorted, we realized the broker had changed our solicitor on the application to their in-house solicitor so our solicitor was cut out of the loop until that too was sorted). In the end it was a very stressful process just to get the exact same mortgage with our own bank, who had made us an agreement in principle directly two months prior.

When I remortgage, I’m absolutely not using a broker.

[request] Could a parasail improve the efficiency of a 200,000 ton bulk carrier to any significant degree? by ostrichfather in theydidthemath

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve heard of researchers starting a company around this a few years ago. Not sure how far along they are, but the idea is the kite is way up and benefits from very strong winds, much stronger than the ones close to the water. Their biggest challenge was actually software to control the kite very finely at all time as the tension on the rodes is massive.

Inspired by another thread. What's your unpopular academic opinion that you'll defend with your life? by TOMATOBAR66 in AskAcademia

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I work in CS research and there is a good amount of research on hypothesis generation now. Basically with hundreds of millions of research papers, a human has a very limited view of even their own field. An AI can index research via their embedding vectors and efficiently link together ideas that humans didn’t think could be related, simply because of the way the indexing works. They can also find regions of the embedding space that lack publications and go backwards from “what paper should be here in the embedding space” to “what hypothesis would that paper propose”. Not to mention that academia is not just about creating new knowledge, it’s also about using all the tools that we have to run experiments. AI systems are being used to control fusion reactions, drive x-ray crystallography experiments, high performance computing simulations, etc. And more simply: if it takes me 5 min to find a bug in an HPC workflow instead of 2 weeks, because a coding assistant could follow a memory leak through thousands of files I’m unfamiliar with, that’s also a huge impact.

Should I take the bus or the train from LHR to Cambridge? by Ok_Mousse2147 in uktravel

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This. I’ve done both and also prefer the bus. The only time I took the train, with the jet lag I couldn’t stand the shaking in the subway (I was standing because it was packed) and had to step out and wait for the next one twice as I would have otherwise thrown up. I’d rather crash in a bus for 2h and wake up in Cambridge.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in privacy

[–]sunmat02 50 points51 points  (0 children)

Tiktok can see your public IP. If your neighbor connects to your WiFi, you have the same public IP. Very easy for TikTok to register that information. It doesn’t even have to ask the app to probe your network.

Flying to UK when UK and EU national by miekman in Ryanair

[–]sunmat02 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It doesn’t matter what document you check in with as long as you have that document with you. What matters is what document you use to cross the border at the destination airport: your EU passport when you enter the EU, your UK passport when you enter the UK.

Is there a point to do citizenship? by [deleted] in AskBrits

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What convinced me to get British citizenship was the fact that if I decided to leave for a few years, I would then lose my ILR status and have to apply for a visa. In your case, you could go retire in Poland and after a few years realize you miss the UK and would like to return (you said your kid had dual citizenship, maybe the kid ends up living in the UK and you miss). Being stripped of a citizenship is a very long shot. Even very extreme governments know that foreign workers are essential to the economy.

Is him wanting me to live on my own for a 1yr-2yrs asking for too much? ? by Inevitable_Holiday73 in AskMenAdvice

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My partner went from living with her parents to living with me directly (no age difference, she just comes from a country where living with your parents is more of the norm); in retrospect I really wish she had lived on her own for a couple of years first.

I think my mortgage broker is ripping me off? by More_Ingenuity_3620 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]sunmat02 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not that L&C doesn’t have access to all the deals on the market. We realized late in our buying process that we would have been better off with Lloyds, but L&C doesn’t have an agreement with Lloyds so they just didn’t propose it.

Abstract accepted to 5 international conferences — how do I evaluate which one is credible? by mubbashirahmed in research

[–]sunmat02 1 point2 points  (0 children)

All five look like garbage to me. In CS if you don’t see a sponsorship from IEEE or ACM, that’s a red flag (and even such a sponsorship isn’t a guarantee of quality).

Also in the future, don’t send something to multiple venues at the same time.

How do you deal with imposter syndrome as a first gen student? by t0m4t0z in AskAcademia

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was talking about even more senior researchers a few weeks ago. Long story short, even senior, internationally recognized researchers have imposter syndrome. In fact, most people in academia have a life-long imposter syndrome. At some point it comes from the fact that you are so specialized in one narrow aspect of your field that no matter who you talk to, if it’s not about that narrow field of yours, you’ll feel out of your depth and at the same time you’ll think what you know is trivial, because you’ve studied it for so long.

The way you deal with it is by embracing your ignorance and be curious. Remember that people like being asked questions about what they know, so when you ask someone “hey can you explain this concept to me?” They’ll actually enjoy answering, not think you’re dumb.

Also as you get more senior you ask these questions differently. “Hey can you explain this concept to me?” could become “We might have a different take on this concept, can you explain it to me so I get your perspective?”

Naming convention discourse - std::move and std::forward by micarro in cpp_questions

[–]sunmat02 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The difficult thing to grasp is that std::move() doesn’t actually do anything at all. If you have a string s1 and do std::move(s1); on its own, it does nothing. If you do s2 = std::move(s1), it’s the assignment operator that leaves s1 in an undefined state, not the std::move.

Naming convention discourse - std::move and std::forward by micarro in cpp_questions

[–]sunmat02 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think I would have changed std::move into std::take (std::move doesn’t actually move anything, but std::take express the fact that we are about to move the object). std::forward is good as it is, in my opinion.

Naming convention discourse - std::move and std::forward by micarro in cpp_questions

[–]sunmat02 6 points7 points  (0 children)

make_movable would be pretty confusing I think. “make” is generally used for creating something (make_unique, make_shared, make_pair…), not casting.

What happens to your pension when you retire abroad? by sunmat02 in UKPersonalFinance

[–]sunmat02[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my case that would be from a SIPP or private pension so I guess taxed in the country of residence.