Uni Thread

Algorithm specialization, sounds interesting. Could you elaborate?

I'm failing my calculus class. I have my final on friday and I need a 87 to get a C.

I just want to do Chemical Engineering senpai! I'm golden on chemistry, like the back of my hand. Damn logical thinking!


Miami Dade College
chemical engineering
barely started/10
Oil in the Midwest

(from website)
Algorithms. This specialization focuses on fundamental computational techniques, including their analysis and applications to topics in computer vision, computer games, graphics, artificial intelligence, and information retrieval. Topics include data structures, graph and network algorithms, computational geometry, probabilistic algorithms, complexity theory, and cryptography.

required upper div classes:
COMPSCI 162 Formal Languages and Automata
COMPSCI 163 Graph Algorithms
COMPSCI 164 Computational Geometry and Geometric Modeling
COMPSCI 165 Project In Algorithms And Data Structures
COMPSCI 167 Introduction to Applied Cryptography
COMPSCI 169 Introduction to Optimization

I see, this is similar to what I am doing. Pretty cool.

lmfao, if you cannot do calculus, you are not worthy of engineering.

Cal poly SLO
Math + CS
Pretty okay, wish there was more theory & research
Machine Learning

Planeptune University
Lesbian Goddess Worship
10/10
Carpet muncher

University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Electrical Engineering

idk I think it is like mid tier or lower? not that great but better than nothing

Junior this year, plan on electromagnetics+RF, might be interested in analog circuit design or photonics if I like the classes. Applying for top MS programs next year and if I like it might try for PhD afterwards.

*EPFL
*EE (Masters student)
*I think it is ranked highly in the world and honestly the professors seem way better than my undergrad ones (Bsc in USA)
*currently studying analog, mixed signal, and RF design. For minor im planning on biomedical tech or space tech. Might try stay for phd afterwards, might just try to find work in the US though

I'm about to start an Actuarial science degree. I'll be taking Calculus, Algebra and Analytical geometry with math majors.

What do you consider to be "essential memorized concepts" that I should have fresh in my mind before starting?

I know how to derivate and integrate, and I can understand everything from high school math, but I haven't memorized formulas. I know one of the whole points of college math is understanding the theory behind formulas instead of memorizing, but I guess some previous knowledge must be essentialy memorized first.