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golemarms

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Haskell.com

haskell.com
1 points·by golemarms·il y a 5 ans·0 comments

Turning cockroaches into life-saving cyborg bugs at disaster sites

straitstimes.com
4 points·by golemarms·il y a 5 ans·0 comments

Unix.sg

unix.sg
2 points·by golemarms·il y a 5 ans·0 comments

comments

golemarms
·il y a 3 ans·discuss
Cool. Now try writing a Python compiler in 500 lines of C.
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
Not really symbolic reasoning. I'm thinking more along the line of classic ML techniques like Random Forest/GLMs have long been successfully applied to business problems.
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
> I'd also add, maybe controversially, that anyone using "AI" to make some kind of basic prediction (say for personalization, demand planning, medical decisions, really most tabular data) is not going to have a business that lives or dies based on AI.

Unfortunately this rules out the vast majority of business use-cases. ML use-cases on structured data vastly outnumber those of vision/nlp/RL.

Also you seem to be restricting the term "AI" to Neural network-type techniques.
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
Yes, backend engineers do get paid more in general. I was just wondering why this runs contrary to OP's explanation that "closeness" to user triumphs job difficulty (when it comes to leverage/salaries).
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
Interesting. I wonder if this distinction applies within software as well. For example, systems programmers getting paid less than application programmers because the latter makes software "closer" to the user, and backend programmers getting paid less than frontend programmers for the same reason.
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
> If costs get too high Asian companies win

Wouldn't this apply to software companies as well? Yet we see higher pay, rather than imports/outsourcing.
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
According to the youtube description, that video was originally aired in 2007.
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
> If the Federal Reserve sticks to its guns and gets rates up, and keeps them there, it will be unsurprising to see "hard" engineering jobs be valuable again, while all the CSS people suddenly can't find two pennies to rub together.

I was under the impression that "hard" engineering isn't as financially attractive to investors due to the long payoff period as compared to web software. In that case, won't high interest rates actually hurt "hard" engineering due to a greater discount being applied to future cashflows?
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
>It's strictly a viewer only, so it doesn't even have rudimentary annotations like highlights or underlines

SumatraPDF supports basic annotations as of version 3.3 https://www.sumatrapdfreader.org/docs/Editing-annotations
golemarms
·il y a 4 ans·discuss
> For instance building some state control engine for rockets etc.

Just out of curiosity: are there companies actually writing mission-critical code in a Haskell? My impression is that those normally tend to get written in C++ and the like.
golemarms
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Agree with your points. However, parent commenter could have specified they were referring to software tech, not technology in general.
golemarms
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
isn't biotech a kind of "tech"?
golemarms
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Imperial College actually used to offer a BSc Physics and Music Performance course[1] (it was suspended recently). This is notable because dual majors, even between similar/adjacent academic fields, are rare for UK undergraduate degrees.

[1] https://www.imperial.ac.uk/study/ug/courses/physics-departme...
golemarms
·il y a 5 ans·discuss
Most common non-STEM degree maybe. I'm sure there are a lot more EE/ physics/ math grads working as programmers than music grads.