A study claims to compare giving people same molar amounts of potassium chloride and potassium citrate... (They obviously didn't do that, because potassium citrate has 3 potassium atoms while chloride has 1, so (a) it would make no sense to do that (b) they would need to be exceedingly lucky to so happen to find a potassium dose ratio other than 1:1 that gives indistinguishable effects. They most like mean "moles of potassium" without saying that.)
I'm looking for a student for an M.Sc. in Computer Science at the University of Calgary. *This is a fully funded position.*
The project: building tools to help understand how "retro" video games were made under amazingly constrained circumstances. While it's a CS position, this is interdisciplinary work done in collaboration with archaeologists and others.
Needs: strong coding skills, good writing abilities. Ideally: low-level, reverse engineering, or compiler experience.
Durch meine Inkompetenz habe ich jetzt in drei Wochen eine B2-Deutschprüfung. Mein Deutsch ist nicht ganz schrecklich, aber ich schreibe gar nicht gut, und jetzt muss ich schnell üben. Darum werde ich in diesem Pfad (sagt man “Pfad” oder “Thread” eigentlich?) jeden Tag bis dann etwas schreiben.
Wenn jemand Fehler oder so bemerkt, wird ich ganz dankbar sein für Hinweise.
Offered without comment: https://mathoverflow.net/questions/38856/jokes-in-the-sense-of-littlewood-examples
ISTM that the transformation that #rust does to bodies of async functions to split them into pieces-between-await-calls requires unsafe blocks (if we hold a ref from one block to another, the ref remains valid only by virtue of !Unpin around its target and so we start relying on things that cannot be expressed in the type/lifetime system for safety).
Is there a macro library/something that would allow me to do something similar _without writing unsafe myself_?
WTAF. Firefox has "sponsored shortcuts" on new tab page: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/sponsor-privacy
@rysiek who I think might be ~interested
I enjoy things around information theory (and data compression), complexity theory (and cryptography), read hard scifi, currently work on weird ML (we'll see how it goes), am somewhat literal minded and have approximate knowledge of random things. I like when statements have truth values, and when things can be described simply (which is not exactly the same as shortly) and yet have interesting properties.
I live in the largest city of Switzerland (and yet have cow and sheep pastures and a swimmable lake within a few hundred meters of my place :)). I speak Polish, English, German, and can understand simple Swiss German and French.
If in doubt, please err on the side of being direct with me. I very much appreciate when people tell me that I'm being inaccurate. I think that satisfying people's curiosity is the most important thing I could be doing (and usually enjoy doing it). I am normally terse in my writing and would appreciate requests to verbosify.
I appreciate it if my grammar or style is corrected (in any of the languages I use here).