now if only i was skilled enough to really pursue a more stem-heavy majorKarmine wrote:
I like this channel:
My small brain can understand it.
science is fun
now if only i was skilled enough to really pursue a more stem-heavy majorKarmine wrote:
I like this channel:
My small brain can understand it.
actually making it difficult to determine a good major to go inKarmine wrote:
Same, went into computer science because it was easier than physics lol.z0z wrote:
now if only i was skilled enough to really pursue a more stem-heavy majorKarmine wrote:
I like this channel:
My small brain can understand it.
science is fun
It was indeed easy af.
Computer engineering can pay a lot if you are good at it (FPGA & embedded stuffs). That's software for automobile, routers, medical machines, defense, etc. I don't believe it's as competitive as web dev cs crowd, but many who major in computer engineering do tend to switch to cs pretty fast because they don't like it (like Roshan).z0z wrote:
actually making it difficult to determine a good major to go in
problems, i'm a rising junior so i would have to somehow arrange my classes in a way that i can remain graduating on time and also i'm not sure i'll be good at engineeringabraker wrote:
Computer engineering can pay a lot if you are good at it (FPGA & embedded stuffs). That's software for automobile, routers, medical machines, defense, etc. I don't believe it's as competitive as web dev cs crowd, but many who major in computer engineering do tend to switch to cs pretty fast because they don't like it (like Roshan).z0z wrote:
actually making it difficult to determine a good major to go in
with that line of thinking you are not going to get farz0z wrote:
problems, i'm a rising junior so i would have to somehow arrange my classes in a way that i can remain graduating on time and also i'm not sure i'll be good at engineeringabraker wrote:
Computer engineering can pay a lot if you are good at it (FPGA & embedded stuffs). That's software for automobile, routers, medical machines, defense, etc. I don't believe it's as competitive as web dev cs crowd, but many who major in computer engineering do tend to switch to cs pretty fast because they don't like it (like Roshan).z0z wrote:
actually making it difficult to determine a good major to go in
i was only good enough to pass some science classes
uh-huh anyway i curse you with low volition <3 anything you're interested in is too tiring for you to pursue nowabraker wrote:
with that line of thinking you are not going to get farz0z wrote:
problems, i'm a rising junior so i would have to somehow arrange my classes in a way that i can remain graduating on time and also i'm not sure i'll be good at engineeringabraker wrote:
Computer engineering can pay a lot if you are good at it (FPGA & embedded stuffs). That's software for automobile, routers, medical machines, defense, etc. I don't believe it's as competitive as web dev cs crowd, but many who major in computer engineering do tend to switch to cs pretty fast because they don't like it (like Roshan).z0z wrote:
actually making it difficult to determine a good major to go in
i was only good enough to pass some science classes
instead thinking "I don't think I'll be good at" or "im only good enough for x" think about what spikes your interest and look more into it.
I looked into coding looooong before I went to college. My 2nd year in highschool I looked up tutorials online and started out making games in command prompt. I thought that was so cool I continued and that allowed me to build the skilset. I was also fascinated about tech even then and joined my highscool's robotics club.
ngl my ass just can't really get to doing much self-studyAchromalia wrote:
uh-huh anyway i curse you with low volition <3 anything you're interested in is too tiring for you to pursue nowabraker wrote:
with that line of thinking you are not going to get farz0z wrote:
problems, i'm a rising junior so i would have to somehow arrange my classes in a way that i can remain graduating on time and also i'm not sure i'll be good at engineeringabraker wrote:
Computer engineering can pay a lot if you are good at it (FPGA & embedded stuffs). That's software for automobile, routers, medical machines, defense, etc. I don't believe it's as competitive as web dev cs crowd, but many who major in computer engineering do tend to switch to cs pretty fast because they don't like it (like Roshan).z0z wrote:
actually making it difficult to determine a good major to go in
i was only good enough to pass some science classes
instead thinking "I don't think I'll be good at" or "im only good enough for x" think about what spikes your interest and look more into it.
I looked into coding looooong before I went to college. My 2nd year in highschool I looked up tutorials online and started out making games in command prompt. I thought that was so cool I continued and that allowed me to build the skilset. I was also fascinated about tech even then and joined my highscool's robotics club.
...
mm, i would hope to agree though, ideally i would want to imagine that interest would be a reliable determining factor of what would be best to healthily pursue and maybe be challenged with
ultimately though there are a far greater range of fears around being ill-equipped for what exactly would be taught, and it's difficult from an unfamiliarized perspective to really intuit what you would realistically hope to see from majoring in something when you're learning a particular frame of perspective and scope of application about that subject
like i could apply for some academic track that i think would cover what i love but i would fear something like bieng easily mistaken about the implications and consequences and logistics of that study in practice. it sort of starts to feel like you need absolute ful context before pursuing something that already costs you so much to the extent that the institution itself is known/recognized more for being a source of years or decades of debt rather than what information it supplied you with
im not quite sure how to articulate this, but, something like that, maybe
Funny you say that because my first semester in college I did not have a major and was undecided. What? Abraker, but given all you told us surely you would go computer science major, right? Well that's what I thought I wanted to do, that's what I liked, but it's also what I have known best. And that was an issue to me because I would spend first 2 years being taught what I already learned myself. The other option was computer engineering technology, and that too deals with stuff I like but also stuff I knew much less about at the time. Working with actual circuit board hardware coding instead of just computers unlocked a new path for me.Achromalia wrote:
like i could apply for some academic track that i think would cover what i love but i would fear something like bieng easily mistaken about the implications and consequences and logistics of that study in practice. it sort of starts to feel like you need absolute ful context before pursuing something that already costs you so much to the extent that the institution itself is known/recognized more for being a source of years or decades of debt rather than what information it supplied you with
mmyeah, i wonder if sometimes you're just immediately and fundamentally disadvantaged from just not being fortunate enough to be well-conditioned or predisposed to a certain perspective with a certain range of conditions for persistence...z0z wrote:
ngl my ass just can't really get to doing much self-study
it's very possible that my attitude did push me into a wall for college and i do think cost is a pretty big reason
if a person decided to roll the dice on a new life that may improve their situation, since most life on earth is bacteria, they'll probably just be a bacteria or some unknown alien organismAchromalia wrote:
mmyeah, i wonder if sometimes you're just immediately and fundamentally disadvantaged from just not being fortunate enough to be well-conditioned or predisposed to a certain perspective with a certain range of conditions for persistence...z0z wrote:
ngl my ass just can't really get to doing much self-study
it's very possible that my attitude did push me into a wall for college and i do think cost is a pretty big reason
i'd probably struggle, maybe, because of a generalized failure to persist and remain attentive in my interests + a highly fearful profile of avoiding anything that seems even remotely close to being regrettable, while failing to avoid the regrettable position of inaction itself
not that you can't be performatively shocked in order to express or illustrate your points more, but it seems to be kind of presumptive and dismissiveabraker wrote:
Funny you say that because my first semester in college I did not have a major and was undecided. What? Abraker, but given all you told us surely you would go computer science major, right? Well that's what I thought I wanted to do, that's what I liked, but it's also what I have known best. And that was an issue to me because I would spend first 2 years being taught what I already learned myself. The other option was computer engineering technology, and that too deals with stuff I like but also stuff I knew much less about at the time. Working with actual circuit board hardware coding instead of just computers unlocked a new path for me.Achromalia wrote:
like i could apply for some academic track that i think would cover what i love but i would fear something like bieng easily mistaken about the implications and consequences and logistics of that study in practice. it sort of starts to feel like you need absolute ful context before pursuing something that already costs you so much to the extent that the institution itself is known/recognized more for being a source of years or decades of debt rather than what information it supplied you with
So if it comes to choosing major related to something you already know, try going for a close alternative that will help supplement what you already do know.
Well I know you to be a music artist, so that's the primary direction in my mind I figured you would go for. Mind you, I was totally unaware of the other interests you mentioned you have. So given the previous train of thought, that music is your interest, and contingently are really good and are improving at it, I see you going for that in college. Then applying my suggestion would have you go for something supplemental to music production in college. Now I have no idea what majors exist in the relm of music, but suffice to say, it would be most useful if it provides you knowledge enabling you to create sellable works in the future.Achromalia wrote:
in my case, i don't know what i realistically am able to imagine myself doing with college/university, though i seem to believe i'd love to work/explore with art (and maybe animation) and music (production-oriented) and game development and web development
<3Luqanted wrote:
brudda i missed ur science stuffs im just enjoying rn to see that ur still the same since the old days
I am close, I feel itTad Fibonacci wrote:
All this science and abraker still can't make vaccines for Trashipitus
So it turned out it was not only a false lost media case with that alledged recording, but now a radio laser.abraker wrote:
The Wow! Signal is a famous signal that was observed around the beginning of radio astronomy. Back then it was hypothesized that if aliens would communicate with other aliens they don't know the language or technology of, the most likely radio frequency they would do it on is the one where hydrogen emit photons when its electron is flipped. When observed it was the most, and still is, one of the most powerful signals seen at that frequency. So the scientific community got excited because that might me aliens are really out there. However, it was never seen again, so this made it unlikely it was aliens. Scientists would spend decades trying to explain what the signal is and where it came from.
Now there is explanation of what it is: A radio laser! So it turns out when a star flares up, either through a coronal mass ejection or some other process, that ionized material is able to mix with hydrogen rich nubulae, producing conditions just right to cause the hydrogen atoms' electrons to flip and make photons at just that frequency. And if you consider a magnetar, a neutron star with a very powerful magnetic field, then you basically get a radio death ray of astronomical proportions.
ok as much as i dont yet understand how to talk about anything like this in its field of science and have barely held any enduring passion in this as an interest at the moment, i actually have wondered about this for an incredibly long time... the ways that human characteristics and their contexts can be systematized, the hope of effectively and accurately simulating what our ecosystems appear to be and what it is that they functionally enable, really just any form of modelling the world around me in an attempt to understand itabraker wrote:
Machine learning is a subject very near and dear to me. This video does a fantastic job explaining how information is encoded in AI.
Basically the AI learns what kind of scales are needed as it tries to sort out information it is training on: how masculine or feminine something is? Put that on an axis. How fake or real something is? Put that on an axis. Family vs stranger? You guessed it, it's own axis!
So with all the many things you can put on an axis, you get vectors [x, y, w, ...] that are many dimensions. GPT-3 has about 12,000 of those dimensions. The most interesting part is that the AI learns relations in a way you can do math on them. Say you got a family scale going from [-x, +x] and -x is closer to sibling and +x is closer to parent. Well if you take the point where "mom" and "dad", say something like [ 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ...] and subtract x from it (make it closer toward sibling) you get [ -2.0, 3.0, 4.0, ...] which now corresponds to "sister" and "brother".
I need to write another couple paragraphs explaining how the AI processes questions such as "does Michael Jordan play basketball?", but the video explains that much better than I can do in text.
i actually have wondered about this for an incredibly long time... the ways that human characteristics and their contexts can be systematized, the hope of effectively and accurately simulating what our ecosystems appear to be and what it is that they functionally enable, really just any form of modelling the world around me in an attempt to understand itI get the same feeling as well, and is the main reason why I decided to work on pp dev as a hobby. I set experiments consistenting of maps for players to do and in the process discovered the relationship between distance, cs, angles, note speed, etc
like, you noted the "masculine/feminine" "axis(?)", which is something that i would've thought should seem very extremely challenging to quantify when you have billions of people with subtly variable concepts of what that means and what basis on which that's to be determined-- and those things may be dependent on different anchor points entirely...
awaiting a new tiktok trend...abraker wrote:
Scientists figured out how to use yellow food dye to make skin transparent. Has been tested on mice, still waiting to test on people. But imagine if this actually does work. Halloween will never be same again!
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
Understanding the world around you is cool though.Patatitta wrote:
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
the thing is when you watch a video about science stuff and you think you understand it do you really? sometimes its well explanied and easy to understand but other times hard concepts are explained and you can only kind off get it but never really get it. The only science stuff that i still kinda like is stars and space stuff but its more in like a oh look pretty things wayKarmine wrote:
Understanding the world around you is cool though.Patatitta wrote:
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
I don't always understand everything but with time learn more and understand more complex stuff.Reyalp51 wrote:
the thing is when you watch a video about science stuff and you think you understand it do you really? sometimes its well explanied and easy to understand but other times hard concepts are explained and you can only kind off get it but never really get it. The only science stuff that i still kinda like is stars and space stuff but its more in like a oh look pretty things wayKarmine wrote:
Understanding the world around you is cool though.Patatitta wrote:
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
a lot of science isn't really about the world around me, it's about the world really far away or facts and stuff that honestly I can pretty much live well without, it's not information I currently reject if I just happen to learn it but it's not something that excites me too much or something i'm going to go out of my way to learnKarmine wrote:
Understanding the world around you is cool though.Patatitta wrote:
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
Pretty much any fictitious story doesn't affect anyone, but people like to consume those stories because it stimulates ideas and imagination. Science should stimulate ideas and imagination in a similar way, but in a more tangible aspect because it is related to the reality we find ourselves in. For example, I don't think knowing how star systems form helps me day to day, but it does awe me and more grounded in the physical reality.Patatitta wrote:
a lot of science isn't really about the world around me, it's about the world really far away or facts and stuff that honestly I can pretty much live well without, it's not information I currently reject if I just happen to learn it but it's not something that excites me too much or something i'm going to go out of my way to learnKarmine wrote:
Understanding the world around you is cool though.Patatitta wrote:
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
I think that comparasion is way off, science and art are way different, art is stuff human makes for other humans (mostly), they often evoke certain very curated feelings and ideas, science is just something that exists, you can probably find meaning in science as well, but it's not really the same thing, science is more like something that you like, yeah it's not necessarily going to affect your daily life, but it also doesn't really need to, it's like liking trains or just having any other random thing that you enjoyabraker wrote:
Pretty much any fictitious story doesn't affect anyone, but people like to consume those stories because it stimulates ideas and imagination. Science should stimulate ideas and imagination in a similar way, but in a more tangible aspect because it is related to the reality we find ourselves in. For example, I don't think knowing how star systems form helps me day to day, but it does awe me and more grounded in the physical reality.Patatitta wrote:
a lot of science isn't really about the world around me, it's about the world really far away or facts and stuff that honestly I can pretty much live well without, it's not information I currently reject if I just happen to learn it but it's not something that excites me too much or something i'm going to go out of my way to learnKarmine wrote:
Understanding the world around you is cool though.Patatitta wrote:
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
Going off on a tangent here, but I and my friend got into an argument some few weeks ago when I said our minds are merely electrochemical pulses in the brain. He respects science, but also rejects explanations that make people less than he believes them to be. Like in a "no way we are just merely a collection of atoms" kind of way. Instead he opts to believe there is some kind of "soul" element to our mind and will that cannot be attributed to physics. That the mind can will itself to do anything. It really rubs me the wrong way, and if he knew more about how the neurology of the mind, he very likely wouldn't argue that. This is where I think an interest in science does help.
Comparing story to art is an incorrect interpretation of what I am trying to convey. Science is definitely not meant to invoke feelings, but I guess feelings and the artistic liberty is one of the first things that come to mind when you think of a good story. I was thinking along the lines of world building and what makes one immersed in the fictitious world being depicted. To me science is the world building of the non fictitious story we find ourselves in.Patatitta wrote:
I think that comparasion is way off, science and art are way different, art is stuff human makes for other humans (mostly), they often evoke certain very curated feelings and ideas, science is just something that exists, you can probably find meaning in science as well, but it's not really the same thing, science is more like something that you like, yeah it's not necessarily going to affect your daily life, but it also doesn't really need to, it's like liking trains or just having any other random thing that you enjoyabraker wrote:
Pretty much any fictitious story doesn't affect anyone, but people like to consume those stories because it stimulates ideas and imagination. Science should stimulate ideas and imagination in a similar way, but in a more tangible aspect because it is related to the reality we find ourselves in. For example, I don't think knowing how star systems form helps me day to day, but it does awe me and more grounded in the physical reality.Patatitta wrote:
a lot of science isn't really about the world around me, it's about the world really far away or facts and stuff that honestly I can pretty much live well without, it's not information I currently reject if I just happen to learn it but it's not something that excites me too much or something i'm going to go out of my way to learnKarmine wrote:
Understanding the world around you is cool though.Patatitta wrote:
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
Going off on a tangent here, but I and my friend got into an argument some few weeks ago when I said our minds are merely electrochemical pulses in the brain. He respects science, but also rejects explanations that make people less than he believes them to be. Like in a "no way we are just merely a collection of atoms" kind of way. Instead he opts to believe there is some kind of "soul" element to our mind and will that cannot be attributed to physics. That the mind can will itself to do anything. It really rubs me the wrong way, and if he knew more about how the neurology of the mind, he very likely wouldn't argue that. This is where I think an interest in science does help.
well, it may be that for you, but not for me, that's the pointabraker wrote:
Comparing story to art is an incorrect interpretation of what I am trying to convey. Science is definitely not meant to invoke feelings, but I guess feelings and the artistic liberty is one of the first things that come to mind when you think of a good story. I was thinking along the lines of world building and what makes one immersed in the fictitious world being depicted. To me science is the world building of the non fictitious story we find ourselves in.Patatitta wrote:
I think that comparasion is way off, science and art are way different, art is stuff human makes for other humans (mostly), they often evoke certain very curated feelings and ideas, science is just something that exists, you can probably find meaning in science as well, but it's not really the same thing, science is more like something that you like, yeah it's not necessarily going to affect your daily life, but it also doesn't really need to, it's like liking trains or just having any other random thing that you enjoyabraker wrote:
Pretty much any fictitious story doesn't affect anyone, but people like to consume those stories because it stimulates ideas and imagination. Science should stimulate ideas and imagination in a similar way, but in a more tangible aspect because it is related to the reality we find ourselves in. For example, I don't think knowing how star systems form helps me day to day, but it does awe me and more grounded in the physical reality.Patatitta wrote:
a lot of science isn't really about the world around me, it's about the world really far away or facts and stuff that honestly I can pretty much live well without, it's not information I currently reject if I just happen to learn it but it's not something that excites me too much or something i'm going to go out of my way to learnKarmine wrote:
Understanding the world around you is cool though.Patatitta wrote:
idk, it's just not as appealing to me, I think in many ways that me liking science was a response to other stuff, it was part of my identity, I wasn't a normie that liked common things like football, instead I was cool and smart because I saw science videos on youtube, but as time passed and I kinda understood that thought process was idiotic I slowly lost interest, and given that now it's something that really doesn't affect me personally in any way whatsoever it's hard to have the same passion for it as I once hadabraker wrote:
why do you think that?Patatitta wrote:
this morning I watched interestellar, kinda made me think, I used to like science when I was in highschool but i've kinda fallen out of love with it, it's just whatever to me now
Going off on a tangent here, but I and my friend got into an argument some few weeks ago when I said our minds are merely electrochemical pulses in the brain. He respects science, but also rejects explanations that make people less than he believes them to be. Like in a "no way we are just merely a collection of atoms" kind of way. Instead he opts to believe there is some kind of "soul" element to our mind and will that cannot be attributed to physics. That the mind can will itself to do anything. It really rubs me the wrong way, and if he knew more about how the neurology of the mind, he very likely wouldn't argue that. This is where I think an interest in science does help.