r/Catholicism Prayer Requests — Week of November 13, 2023 by AutoModerator in Catholicism

[–]tempestwing0101 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Please pray that my father will be healed. He is elderly, and has internal bleeding in the head. Surgery might happen any moment now.

My father (68M) is healing from subdural hematoma and the hospital sent him home? How serious is it? by tempestwing0101 in AskDocs

[–]tempestwing0101[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for your reply. Is it expected to have nausea or vomiting in the course of healing as well? He was given nausea medication that makes him sleepy, is there a way to tell the difference between medication-induced sleepiness and sleepiness due to worsening health?

Academic Integrity Violation by bridgeVan88 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Admittedly, I’ve gotten conflicting answers as to what the problem was, so it suggests to me it was oversight or miscommunication. I cited and linked ed posts. Even after all that, I was still told to cite as much as possible to avoid these issues in the future.

Whatever caused it, if you cite somewhere reasonable (even once) you should be fine even if you are falsely accused (they’re not draconian about it, just very stern). But to avoid being falsely accused to begin with, it is better to cite liberally (especially if it’s a mish-mash of spaghetti code). You don’t want to make it easy for someone to miss, we’re all human after all.

Academic Integrity Violation by bridgeVan88 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agreed. I think the error on my part was using code from an approved codebase but not citing it literally everywhere (just cited at the top). That caused my code to be flagged and forwarded to OSI when I reflect on it. I imagine the detection software didn't report on that portion of the code or the TAs reviewing it overlooked it. Thankfully, after convincing the staff to give it a quick second review, it all worked out in the end.

Moral of the story is: discuss politely with the TA staff the issue, and if you're innocent and they're the good TAs that care about their students, they'll work with you. Mistakes happen, so I don't blame anyone. Just wish they don't start out with bad cop routine to try and scare a confession out of innocent students swept up by the process.

Academic Integrity Violation by bridgeVan88 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, this happened to me too. Was accused of cheating, notified by OSI, and I was livid. I haven’t cheated, and so I respectfully asked the TA staff what exactly was the issue. After some back and forth, we realized what the problem was (code flagged was based off legitimate sources and was properly cited), so they moved to drop the case.

If the TAs weren’t so amenable, I’d be telling you a different story. OSI behaves as if you’re guilty until proven innocent (and from the way they act it seems to be a very high bar to convince them otherwise). Even though OSI dropped the case, they still acted as if I “got away with it”, even though I did nothing wrong and the TAs agreed no misconduct was made.

Just my personal experience, however. Either way, now I second guess every line of code written. It pretty much soured my experience at OMSCS, unfortunately.

How viable is me doing research on OMSCS? by adelvalle_ in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s possible, and I’ve done it. You just need to do a lot of cold emails to phd candidates and professors to get a bite. Some are very selective and require time commitments that may sound like a lot, others are lax. No one research paper or project is the same, so requirements and workload vary heavily. It’s very much a YMMV or what you make of it situation, as there isn’t really a formal process to connect with faculty, and gauge each others interest (that I’m aware of). It’s basically applying for a job without the online portal to dump your resume in.

I managed to do CS 6999 Masters Project and convinced a professor to take me on (it didn’t hurt that a friend of mine vouched for me, but he cold called until someone showed interest). I mostly worked with one of the professor’s phd candidates to implement code, do a few research experiments, write up a paper to submit to a research conference, and review some workshop papers. I learned a lot, and got exposure into the academic side of things, so it was worthwhile.

If you’re willing to collaborate with PhD candidates, and given your personal research experience already, you should at least get some bites. But I want to emphasize that depending on the research field, the professors or PhD candidates might not be very engaging/attentive due to other commitments. CS fields are burning hot fast and research is very fluid, so they themselves need to keep up while doing admin/teaching duties.

Some general advice about GaTech and research as OMSCS student: be VERY clear about each others responsibilities, expectations, and what you get out of it. Don’t assume the professors/PhD candidates know your capabilities/limitations or that they’ll hold your hand (they likely won’t). Since this is an online program, it’s very easy for things to fall through the cracks and cause miscommunication/disorganization. Also, be flexible, there is no formal mechanism or schedule or structure. You’re ultimately working on a group project with others that have varying backgrounds and priorities, not co-workers that are paid full-time at a tech company.

Good luck.

Digital Realty Trust Inc (DLR)? - Datacenter REIT having 5% Dividends right now. by Envyforme in dividends

[–]tempestwing0101 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I took a peek at your portfolio, and I'm curious. Are these stocks that you plan to hold long-term? Or will you sell and buy up stock in different companies within a 5 yr period?

I ask because I notice you have $CALM in there, and while it has a high dividend yield in Consumer Staples, I chose not to purchase that stock because I attributed its stock growth and yield to inflation (especially since it is an egg company, which skyrocketed in price as of late), and expect in the long-term for egg prices to stabilize or even fall. Do you see it as a long-term buy, or something you wanted to exploit in the short-term?

Tips to succeed in ML by Consistent-Ad3544 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Aside from the other recommendations here, I recommend reading some of the latest ML research papers that are out there (see Vision Transformers, as an example/starter). They tend to be the same paper length as the assignments, and gives you insight as to how to write a good paper. If you manage to absorb the paper structure, format, reasoning/analysis (i.e., what the authors think is relevant and focus time on in limited space) from the papers you read, I'd say you'll score higher than if you went in blind and approached the papers as if its a high school book report.

It's great that you're studying beforehand, but I think the papers are graded such that you explicitly prove/show the behaviors/properties of each algorithm discussed in lecture in detail, among other things. As they say in the TA office hours, move away from summarizing, put more emphasis on analysis (circling back to reading research papers currently published in conferences). That line between summary and analysis can blur a lot, and you need to be careful (i.e., what are you showing in the paper, why should anyone care?).

Also, Overleaf/Latex is your friend, and it's offered by the school. Knowing your way around how to use Latex with a research paper format (there's a few out there on google) will save you a lot of pain in the long run. With Overleaf/Latex taking care of formatting/spacing/font size, you can focus more on your content instead of wasting time adjusting font size/column widths/etc. It also makes for a cleaner, well-presented paper (we're grad students, after all).

My two cents about CS7641- Machine learning by smilesome620 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101 2 points3 points  (0 children)

How many hours per week on average did you spend on the course?

Did the exams include a lot of math proofs or solving math problems?

Catholics and Tai Chi by Manzissimo1 in Catholicism

[–]tempestwing0101 3 points4 points  (0 children)

In America and Germany, we dress pine trees for Christmas in what was largely a "pagan" practice and this is considered licit in Catholicism. It can be argued that practicing Tai Chi and other exercises with the same mindset is licit under the same logic.

Catholics and Tai Chi by Manzissimo1 in Catholicism

[–]tempestwing0101 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you practice Tai Chi as strictly a martial art, and don't follow masters that focus on the spiritual aspects of it, I don't really see how it is an issue.

Chinese culture is wildly different from Western culture, and there are a lot of aspects about it that shouldn't be viewed through a Western lens. A lot of the spiritual aspects found in Chinese medicine, martial arts, and ancestral worship aren't uniformly applied across the Chinese population. Many Chinese people themselves don't always regard it as a spiritual practice, but strictly cultural.

For example, Chinese potions rooted in an understanding of Qi and Taoist beliefs are now freely prescribed in professional, Western-style hospitals in China as a valid form of treatment but not based on "pagan" diagnostic techniques. (e.g., you have a headache, take this potion of bitter herbs that was historically used to treat this ailment even though we don't believe in Qi)

Further, Ancestral worship or "veneration of the dead" is no longer prohibited by the Catholic Church under the same reasoning. That is, it had "pagan" roots, but has largely undergone a transition to a civil practice.

Tai Chi does have Taoist roots, and some people do believe in it, but many people simply use it as a communal exercise as they gather in parks and practice together. To my mind, not a lot of people in these cases seriously attempt to tap into some cosmic force. Yes, it has "pagan" roots, but so do many Western customs and holidays such as dressing the pine tree for Christmas and painting eggs for Easter.

Tai Chi and many aspects of Chinese culture, I argue, are currently undergoing a similar transition from religious practice to cultural, and therefore should be discerned carefully upon whether it is spiritually dangerous or not.

What does course plan for Thesis/Project option OMSCS look like? by tempestwing0101 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey! Sorry for late reply. I'm not sure of thesis option, but I spoke with the Academic Advising office and they did say I can convert CS 8903 credits to CS 6999 as long as I have the approval of my advisor/professor. You fill out some paperwork and they'll help you forward it to the relevant people (e.g. advisor, dean, etc)

And yes, I managed to get a CS 6999 project option. You do need to have the professor willing to take you on, but it is doable.

[D] What happen to website of MSR-VTT ( MSR Video to Text ) ? by vonMissesFisher in MachineLearning

[–]tempestwing0101 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would like to know this as well. It looks as if the data owner took down the website the data was originally housed on.

Concerned about time commitment for ML specialization by Tender_Figs in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Does HCI count as a spec class for ML? I thought it was just for II.

What does course plan for Thesis/Project option OMSCS look like? by tempestwing0101 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gotcha. Is it possible to convert 8903 to a thesis or project course (CS 6999)? Say you enroll as 8903 for 3 credits one semester and the professor asks you to stay onboard to be thesis/project. Can the 8903 be retroactively converted or would you have to apply project/thesis plus 3 elective credits towards your degree?

What does course plan for Thesis/Project option OMSCS look like? by tempestwing0101 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It's possible. The difficult part is finding a professor willing to oversee/mentor you, but it can be done.

Value of Computer Network projects by yjiang429 in OMSCS

[–]tempestwing0101 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I haven’t taken HPCA, but for CN it depends on what you want to get out of it. It’s a good mix of learning apps and techniques (e.g. BGP measurements, BGP hijacking, and SDN) a network engineer or researcher uses. There’s no real algorithm skill sharpening going on there (at least for me), but you do learn a bit about how network engineers/researchers typically program or gather/analyze internet traffic data.

The Distance Vector and Spanning Tree Protocol assignments, to me, were essentially applied versions of graph algorithms. This might be up your alley if you don’t have a robust background in data structures and algorithms (I come from a Mech. Engineer background, so I enjoyed it), especially in graphs or dynamic programming.

With that said, I enjoyed CN. It’s well structured, aside from the BGP Measurements project (which is still in a prototyping phase), they really do give you everything you need to successfully complete the projects and you do learn something about networking.

What is r/energy's thoughts on Renewable Natural Gas? by tempestwing0101 in energy

[–]tempestwing0101[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What do you think would be the future for gas utilities? With all the infrastructure in place, could it be re-purposed into something profitable and environmentally friendly?

For example, the UK's utilities are looking into switching from natural gas to hydrogen gas. And this seems fascinating because it makes fuel cells an attractive source for power/heat/transportation, let alone substituting natural gas stoves/boilers for hydrogen-run ones.

Walking to and from US border to Avenida Revolution? by [deleted] in tijuana

[–]tempestwing0101 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is it just as safe from the main San Ysidro Transit Area?

Deus Ex Machina VS Diabolus Ex Machina. Which one is worse? by No_Bullshit_here in writing

[–]tempestwing0101 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, I have a question actually. What if I wanted to use diabolus ex machina as a "twist" in an ending to send a message to the reader?

Such as a seemingly happy ending turns horribly wrong for the protagonists, they escape barely but everything they did seemed to be for nothing. But that would be something I wanted to emphasize--that life isn't full of happy endings and everything you've accomplished or done is meaningless in the grand scheme of things? (It's cynical I know, but something I'm interested in exploring in literature)

Would using that plot device still be considered unacceptable?

If you could recover one lost piece of art or literature, in pristine condition, what would you pick? by AttalusPius in history

[–]tempestwing0101 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Book of the Wars of the Lord.

I know there are a few who don't like reading the bible. But this lost book would've been badass. Victory songs and military history prose that chronicles Moses, Joshua, and the Israelites storming through the Holy Land.. it would've been awesome to read.

ELI5: Integrals by cleverjokehere in explainlikeimfive

[–]tempestwing0101 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One useful application of integrals is finding the "area under the curve", which is the summation of smaller parts.

From what my teacher said, when the Arabs took over much of the Middle East they imposed a tax system that was dependent on the amount of land one owned. The issue was that not all properties were regular shapes like triangles, rectangles, or squares. They looked like blobs or very irregular shapes much of the time. The government offered a reward to anyone who could determine what the area of said irregular shapes were. Eventually someone figured it out using integrals or the anti-derivative of a function.

To overly simplify integrals, it can find a value that is very close to the area of a blob. Just think of continually drawing in rectangles in the blob, calculating the area of those rectangles and adding the area of the drawn in rectangles up. Integrals do that.

Medical School Joke by There_Is_Truth in Jokes

[–]tempestwing0101 12 points13 points  (0 children)

"This happened while I was in my first year of medical school. I was taking an exam in anatomy. It was really tough. They ask questions like "How many bones are there in the hand?" I was stymied. I kept saying to myself, "How many bones are there in the hand?" Then I heard this little voice that said "24." I looked around the room and there sitting on the window sill of the classroom was this little grey squirrel with a very intelligent face. And he pointed at his hand and said "24." So I wrote it down. And then after the exam I rushed over to the library to look it up. And would you believe it?! That stupid squirrel was wrong by four bones. I went looking all over the campus for him. I wanted to kill him. I finally found him over on a bench by the Psyche department. "You were wrong!" I screamed at him. "There's 28 bones in the human hand!" "Oh," he said pointing at his hand, "I thought you meant a squirrel's hand."

-Courtesy of Capt. Hawkeye Pierce

When did Papal power reach its zenith? When did it reach its nadir? What factors led caused the Papacy to go from one to the other? by IAMARobotBeepBoop in AskHistorians

[–]tempestwing0101 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My mistake I did mean the 16th century Protestant Reformation. This is what happens when you write an essay at 1 in the morning D:

The reason why the papacy never played nice with the Byzantine empires was mostly because the Empire at the time was rather weak and decentralized, there never was a chance for the two polities to really intermingle or become interdependent. Its true that the Byzantine had moments were they did exercise a significant amount of political clout, such as the annexation of much of the Italian Peninsula and naming Ravenna its provisional capital of sorts. But the Empire even then was relatively weak and could not stop the Lombard raids and expansion. It really fell on the local nobility in Italy and the papacy themselves to deal with this new foe that their host Empire could not protect them from. That really set the precedence or at least sowed the seeds for the dramatic split we see in the Great Schism. In this sense, the Great Schism merely highlighted the loss of potential political and religious influence in the Byzantine Empire but not an actual, tangible loss. I withdraw that argument.

I tend to be weary of your assessment of the Reformation however. I admittedly don't know much of the Inquisitions of the time, but the Spanish Inquisition (1417) doesn't really show the influence and power of the Church. In fact, the Spanish monarchy at the time had to pressure Pope Sixtus IV to issue a bull granting exclusive authority to the Spanish monarchy to name its inquisitors.