Labyrinth riddle. Two girls (1 always lies, the second always teleschermi truth in a room with 2 doors) i remember that there was a pic with 2 more difficulties to solve im looking for this . One was like "any girl does not know anything about other girl existance"
>>7760748
Girls always lie.
don't know about the other one you're talking about.
but if the girls don't know about each other, can I explain them ? after all, the rule is only 1 question, it doesn't say anything about explanations.
(love the pic)
You can only talk once to the girls and even if you explain her second she would still not see her and She would answer "there are no other girls here" when you try to know about her answers
how do i become mediocre at statistics? i don't want to be good at it. i just want to be able to solve simple problems. i don't know anything about it but i know mediocre multi-variable calculus and mediocre linear algebra
>>7760552
>i know mediocre multi-variable calculus and mediocre linear algebra
>how do i become mediocre at statistics?
continue being you but with a focus on stats
I think you've got the mediocrity thing nailed tbqh
>>7760588
the thing is, i'd have to take a class on it. but i want to learn it by myself. is there a set of notes or problems for idiots or something like that
hehe
Has there ever been an Asian STEM professor who didn't suck ass?
I'm not a racist by any means. I go to a top 20 math / engineering school, so I'm sure these guys are great in their fields and everything and maybe even great educators in their home country, but as educators in English they're horrible 100% of the time in my experience.
All of the good ones I've had have been Asian-American
I've had some bad and some good. Probably more good.
Most of the Asian profs I've had have been good. That said, they've all been Indians who've been speaking English from a very young age, so I might have a biased sample here.
What's the most advanced/coolest/most interesting space related thing our generation is going to witness?
Primitive colonies? Asteroid mining? The development of a new form of space travel?
Post your predictions.
Second Holocaust.
Memes
Fucking nothing.
Hey /sci/, what are some of your expirences say in High School where you were cheated by the education system? Like someone else got something you deserved? Post your expierences.
>born with ADHD
>other children born with the ability to focus
Honestly I wish I'd known about it before I entered uni. Had I known, I would have been able to make use of accommodations and whatnot.
>>7760560
ADHD isn't a thing, you're just lazy
>>7760563
>on a science board
What can I do with a Bachelor's in psychology?
>>7760320
You are now qualified to work at Starbucks. Someday you might even make the coffee.
>>7760320
Qualified to understand why you regret your decision in education.
Alternatively, you can try to justify your choice. Abusive parents, low iq, desire to copulate with children.
>>7760320
Try to analise how you feel about graduating in the most oversaturated meme degree in human history.
Why do people STILL deny that human activity has a large role in climate change? Do people still honestly believe oil companies would never lie to them?
There's no reason to get worked up about it because the government will only make things worse.
>>7760158
Why do people STILL believe that human activity has a large role in climate change? Do people still honestly believe the government would never lie to them?
>>7760168
>implying anthropogenic climate change was made up by the US government and that the VAST majority of climate scientists WORLDWIDE are lying
So recently a paper came out that showed that mealworms can eat, digest and survive on styrofoam. I wondered if other species could do the same so I tried it out with the much larger and totally different species, superworms. Not only will they eat it but they seem to quite enjoy eating it. check it out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TS9PWzkUG2s
It's great they can eat styrofoam, but the bigger question is, can we eat the mealworms once they've grown?
>>7760107
Probably but you'd want to feed them some oats or fruit for a bit, 1 for the taste and 2 to be sure there's no bits of styrofoam left in them. I was thinking put some vermiculite or perlite in with them and as they die and poo soil builds up in the bottom. Then all of the nutrients stored in them goes directly back to the soil and we can just grow some tastier stuff.
>>7760102
They are simply starving to death with a full stomach. I don't buy your bacteria theory. At the very least there are no salts, minerals, vitamins, amino acids or other nutrients in the foam.
Euclid's Elements.
Book 10.
Propositions 48-50.
Why for proposition 48 does it show JUST the greater term, EF, as being a first binomial line, instead of the whole, as the proposition states? For the next two props, the whole line is listed as the binomial lines in question...
I'm wondering if it's my translation.
>>7760039
>http://aleph0.clarku.edu/~djoyce/elements/bookX/propX48.html
>Guide: This proposition is not used in the rest of the Elements.
Is it pronounced "you-clit" or "oi-clit"?
>>7760039
>reading 200+ years old math and asking about it unironically
stop
Help me out /sci/ bros.
I'm going to be graduating soon with a degree in Electrical/Computer Engineering. I've already got a job lined up, but from what I can tell, engineering in industry is often non-technical, uninteresting work.
I want to eventually move into something like R&D, where I might actually do some design work or interesting research. Should I get a Masters Degree as a part time student? Would I actually get more interesting work if I do this, or are masters degrees only memes? What will a masters degree do for me?
I'm not going to quit my job, because the opportunity cost of experience/money is too high. I would love continue my education, but I don't want to apply for a part-time program if it's just a waste of time.
Also, discuss higher education, PhD shit, etc
>>7759976
Work through the industry/field until your employer will pay for your grad school tuition.
>>7759976
>I've already got a job lined up, but from what I can tell, engineering in industry is often non-technical, uninteresting work.
Then you have the wrong job. Git gud, find a better job, and then do what >>7760093 said. Most decent employers will pay for college courses.
Going back for a master's is more useful, IMO, when you have a few years of experience under your belt and have a good idea of what the industry is really like (No matter what you think you know about the industry right now, you don't the whole story.), where you want to go in your career, and what you didn't learn as an undergrad that you wish you had or would be useful to where you want to go.
Don't wait too long; once you have a wife and kids, your free time is gone forever.
Bumping this, because I'm in the same boat.
Are there are certain fields of electrical engineering that are more interesting and intellectually challenging?
How much easier is it to get into R&D without a PhD (masters + 5 yrs exp = PhD)?
Whenever you look at a proof to a hard, unsolved problem nowadays it looks very tedious, complex, and messy, and to an extent this is to be expected, but it's also almost like human intuition wouldn't be helpful, and that you would be better off having a computer search for a proof for you. Is this the new norm? Is elegance going to no longer be a part of math?
>>7759959
what are you talking about? did you even graduate in math? you dont make any sense
>>7759978
Actually, it's a legitimate question.
>>7759959
>nowadays
All original proofs are messy. Proofs go through several iterations before you see the cleaned up nice stuff that are in textbooks.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2015-12/aaft-hec122315.php
Any biologyfags here? What do we know about epigenetics?
>>7759868
It's cool. It probably explain why tumblr kids are a bunch of faggots.
>>7759868
Interested
Bump
I don't work specifically on that field but I work adjacent to it. I also have friends working in that field.
Any specific questions or just a synopses?
Is adderall pretty much academic steroids? What's stopping someone from doing the same things without taking it?
>>7759836
>Is adderall pretty much academic steroids?
No...
>>7759836
>What's stopping someone from doing the same things without taking it?
Wrack of disripline
Adderall is basically lab grade speed
Hey /sci/,
I just got accepted to uni for math with comp. sci major. My computer is on its last legs, and I am thinking of investing in a new PC for before I start. Any suggestions?
My budget is less than 1.5k€.
Thanks
>pic unrelated
>>7759763
Just get a bunch of old thrown out PC and hook them together
>>7759763
Get thinkpad, install gentoo
>>7759780
Never worked in Linux, why is gentoo good?
Hey, /sci/.
Need to construct pic related, any ideas?
Don't know what parts to use, how to bring the main pipe down to an adapter for a valve etc.
Also don't know what sort of valve to use to inject the oxygen into the tube.
It's for a hybrid rocket, so needs to be fairly strong. No woods or plastics. Weight is not an issue.
Feel free to ask me anything you need to know.
How it needs to look when finished building.
only way to do it is to weld the shit together.
you need a tube for the end on your right welded to a circular plate, with a hole in the center. Then you need a pipe for the main body. I don't know wtf you have going on on the left.
What kind of valve depends on what you want to do, how you want to actuate it, how you need to control flow. If this thing is going to be moving and not a bench model you will need an electrically actuated valve. Which means you will also need to carry a battery. If you need precise metering of the ox flow, or if you need a wide range of different flow rates you will need a servo controlled valve. Then you will need a PLC of some sort that you can program, in addition to the battery.
>>7759827
No welding tools.