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19 votes
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This is what happens to an exposed body in space
11 votes -
The Perseverance Mars rover collected its twentieth sample today
19 votes -
Life in the cosmos: James Webb Space Telescope hints at lower number of habitable planets
36 votes -
Mercury ahead! - European Space Agency/JAXA's BepiColumbo completed its third flyby of Mercury today
10 votes -
The advent of sunglasses
9 votes -
Key building block for life found at Saturn's moon Enceladus
9 votes -
For a billion years of Earth's history our days were only nineteen hours long, finds new study
26 votes -
Landmark ‘kids’ climate trial begins: how science will take the stand
13 votes -
Geoengineering is shockingly inexpensive
15 votes -
Eastern philosophy says there's no "self". Science agrees
23 votes -
Any college CS majors here? Any tips for one?
Hey everyone. I’m a Computer Science major who feels very behind. I don’t have any substantial projects to put on my resume. I look at basic open source stuff and can’t understand it. I’m...
Hey everyone. I’m a Computer Science major who feels very behind. I don’t have any substantial projects to put on my resume. I look at basic open source stuff and can’t understand it.
I’m currently attending WGU online, but also work full time so I don’t have a ton of free time to learn or work on side projects.
Anyone have advice for a guy in my scenario? I ended up dropping out of college a couple times during COVID and now I’m just trying to get back on the right path.
The language I know best is Java, but I’ve been trying to learn C++ and web development as well. Applied for internships but no luck so far, I think I need to make some better projects.
18 votes -
NASA prepares for historic asteroid sample delivery on Sept. 24, 2023
11 votes -
Sweden set up a eugenics plan, grounded in the science of racial biology, between 1934 and 1976 – between 20,000 and 33,000 Swedes were forced to be sterilised
12 votes -
Warrior skeletons reveal Bronze Age Europeans couldn't drink milk
8 votes -
Inside Big Beef’s climate messaging machine: Confuse, defend and downplay
8 votes -
Artificial Intelligence Sweden is leading an initiative to build a large language model not only for Swedish, but for all the major languages in the Nordic region
6 votes -
Oppenheimer: Vacated but not vindicated
4 votes -
Ronald Reagan and the biggest failure in physics
5 votes -
Soft ‘e-skin’ generates nerve-like impulses that talk to the brain
8 votes -
Leo Tolstoy on finding meaning in a meaningless world
10 votes -
How Sweden and Denmark became rare bright spots for Europe's pharma industry
3 votes -
Why it took thirteen years to engineer the Taco Bell Crunchwrap
8 votes -
DarkBERT: A language model for the dark side of the internet
11 votes -
Cognitive endurance as human capital
6 votes -
Double descent in human learning
5 votes -
Life in Ny-Ålesund, the world's northern-most research station – in pictures
7 votes -
A peer reviewed paper on walkable neighbourhoods finds that walkability improves residents' happiness
9 votes -
The insane engineering of the M1 Abrams
8 votes -
Quantum computers: What can they do?
4 votes -
Space Elevator
11 votes -
Kurzgesagt: Billionaire propaganda, stories, and trusting science
9 votes -
Artificial intelligence in communication impacts language and social relationships
2 votes -
James Webb Space Telescope adds another ringed world with new image of Uranus
8 votes -
Lord of the Rings–quoting performance wins this year’s ‘Dance Your PhD’ contest
5 votes -
Study of male footballers in Sweden, over many years, found they were one and a half times more likely to develop dementia than the general population
7 votes -
Solid proof that parachutes don’t work
17 votes -
The vertical farming bubble is finally popping
20 votes -
How do we fix and update large language models?
6 votes -
Toolformer: Language models can teach themselves to use tools
11 votes -
Do we see reality as it is? | Donald Hoffman
7 votes -
Over-reliance on English hinders cognitive science
4 votes -
World's oldest European hedgehog discovered in Denmark – posthumous discovery gives conservationists hope for the mammals' future preservation
4 votes -
What will "classically trained" look like for computer science and digital literacy?
This might be a weird framing but it's been bugging me for a few days. Many fields have a concept of classical training -- this is most common in music but applies in the humanities and many other...
This might be a weird framing but it's been bugging me for a few days. Many fields have a concept of classical training -- this is most common in music but applies in the humanities and many other areas. For example I do a lot of CAD work for my job, but I received what I would consider a "classical education" in design...I learned to draft by hand and physically model before I was ever allowed to work digitally. I got a lot of value out of this approach and it still informs the way I work today.
A lot of people view computers and technology as modern and almost anti-classical, but as the tech industry matures and the internet moves from something shiny and new to something foundational to our society, what will the new classicism look like?
Thanks for reading my question.
14 votes -
The story behind the Packing Chromatic paper
5 votes -
Every few months, when the wind's blowing in the right direction, a bottle of air is taken from Kennaook / Cape Grim, at the northern tip of Tasmania, and saved for science. Here's how and why.
6 votes -
Longitudinal study of kindergarteners suggests spanking is harmful for children’s social competence
7 votes -
Expanding the brain. Literally.
3 votes -
Native Americans—and their genes—traveled back to Siberia, new genomes reveal
5 votes -
Archaeology and genetics can’t yet agree on when humans first arrived in the Americas. That’s good science and here’s why.
3 votes