Awesome to hear! For me, the world definitely got a bit darker when I heard earbits was getting shut down. So, congrats on the comeback :).
Visual bookmarks are extremely helpful, particularly if they're well categorized etc.
Once you've worked with enough programmers, you'll realise that many programmers don't actually know how to... well, program. The great websites / open-source projects you see regularly are really just the tall poppies.
If you call up the debt collection agency and explain your financial hardship, it's possible (or even likely) that they will give you a generous extension to the deadline for you to pay the fine.
If you watch Silicon Valley (HBO) episode 1, there is a character who is fairly adamant about NOT going to uni / doing CS!
Most definitely. I've only done a couple on Coursera, but I found the Algorithms courses (1 and 2) by Robert Sedgewick and Kevin Wayne to be pretty well thought-out and articulate.
There is still plenty of work to do in Natural Language Processing. Also, check out Wikipedia's "List of Unsolved Problems in Computer Science": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unsolved_problems_in_c...
Awesome to hear! For me, the world definitely got a bit darker when I heard earbits was getting shut down. So, congrats on the comeback :).
Visual bookmarks are extremely helpful, particularly if they're well categorized etc.
Once you've worked with enough programmers, you'll realise that many programmers don't actually know how to... well, program. The great websites / open-source projects you see regularly are really just the tall poppies.
If you call up the debt collection agency and explain your financial hardship, it's possible (or even likely) that they will give you a generous extension to the deadline for you to pay the fine.
If you watch Silicon Valley (HBO) episode 1, there is a character who is fairly adamant about NOT going to uni / doing CS!
Most definitely. I've only done a couple on Coursera, but I found the Algorithms courses (1 and 2) by Robert Sedgewick and Kevin Wayne to be pretty well thought-out and articulate.
There is still plenty of work to do in Natural Language Processing. Also, check out Wikipedia's "List of Unsolved Problems in Computer Science": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_unsolved_problems_in_c...