I first thought of Rustlang when I saw the title, then I saw the nature.com domain and corrected thinking "oh interesting, what are scientists studying in iron oxide?"
The only overwhelm hospitals experienced was due to the significant number of staff that were furloughed. No health systems were truly overwhelmed from this virus.
Is anyone (who is paid/lives in the US) concerned about the future value of USD? A lot of my friends are saying I should be investing in cryptocurrencies for future safety, but I don't see those as very stable, so I'm hesitant to put my savings into it.
Wow, that is a fascinating video and such an inspiring spirit of hacking. I'd love to learn more about the electrical engineering side of computer science to be able to do similar experiments.
> A conversation with Laurent Mazare about how your choice of programming language interacts with the kind of work you do, and in particular about the tradeoffs between Python and OCaml when doing machine learning and data analysis. Ron and Laurent discuss the tradeoffs between working in a text editor and a Jupyter Notebook, the importance of visualization and interactivity, how tools and practices vary between language ecosystems, and how language features like borrow-checking in Rust and ref-counting in Swift and Python can make machine learning easier.
Hm, I like this a lot. However in regard to RSI, is it more intensive to stay on the keyboard or to frequently use the mouse? Or is it the act of switch from keyboard to mouse that causes injury, and that maybe if you could do everything with the mouse, that could work to?
Most home school parents already do this - dance class has a dance teacher, math has a math tutor or teacher, swedish class has a swedish teacher. It's like school a la carte
I've had this exact sentiment since the beginning but like you say, I've been shouted at (digitally here on HN and in person) that I don't care about grandmas dying.