What is the "DT" mentioned in this article? I have no prior knowledge of that acronym.
At the risk of being annoying, virtually all the research done in linguistics departments anywhere in the world is research in the cognitive science of language, so a social science, not a humanity. This certainly…
I use xelatex in my work and it's still embarassingly fragmented and outdated. We need to start over on a new TeX-like project (also so that it can be ported to mobile).
People who think "going to college is for chumps" (and there are a lot of you on HN) should do this instead. It's not that hard to graduate college in 2-3 years.
I'm not an expert on this, just a linguist who happens to code a lot, but there is some serious work on the complexity of frequency ordering. The algorithms proposed by R. Rivest (1976, Communications of the ACM)…
I happen to know that they do this at the Linguistics Data Consortium (http://www.ldc.upenn.edu/), at least with cable news shows. They mostly do that to obtain data for languages with more minimal resources though, and…
sexist title (and the use of a COOKING METAPHOR for chrissakes). surely this is why there are so few women in computer science.
this has been posted like ten times
What is the "DT" mentioned in this article? I have no prior knowledge of that acronym.
At the risk of being annoying, virtually all the research done in linguistics departments anywhere in the world is research in the cognitive science of language, so a social science, not a humanity. This certainly…
I use xelatex in my work and it's still embarassingly fragmented and outdated. We need to start over on a new TeX-like project (also so that it can be ported to mobile).
People who think "going to college is for chumps" (and there are a lot of you on HN) should do this instead. It's not that hard to graduate college in 2-3 years.
I'm not an expert on this, just a linguist who happens to code a lot, but there is some serious work on the complexity of frequency ordering. The algorithms proposed by R. Rivest (1976, Communications of the ACM)…
I happen to know that they do this at the Linguistics Data Consortium (http://www.ldc.upenn.edu/), at least with cable news shows. They mostly do that to obtain data for languages with more minimal resources though, and…
sexist title (and the use of a COOKING METAPHOR for chrissakes). surely this is why there are so few women in computer science.
this has been posted like ten times