Thread time! Google just announced a thing called "The Data Transfer Project." You might be wondering why they did this and what it means: read on! https://t.co/FHRBillV0k
— Brian Fitzpatrick (@therealfitz) July 23, 2018
Thread time! Google just announced a thing called "The Data Transfer Project." You might be wondering why they did this and what it means: read on! https://t.co/FHRBillV0k
— Brian Fitzpatrick (@therealfitz) July 23, 2018
The entire article hinges on this graph. No the line isn’t horizontal but can we have a chat about the appropriateness of fitting a straight line to this data set? pic.twitter.com/hiZEOCIh2L
— Keiran Thompson (@drenerbas) July 23, 2018
9. The @MITCommLab's communication kit. It contains
— Matt Hauer (@thehauer) July 22, 2018
easy instructions on writing cover letters, formatting CVs, writing abstracts, personal statements, etc. Each part contains annotated examples in action. https://t.co/H7Vl86HUIy 11/12
4. The Plain Person’s Guide to Plain Text Social Science by @kjhealy. Very compelling arguments for developing good research habits with lots of information and great concepts regarding research. https://t.co/qx0dNNZAFN 6/12
— Matt Hauer (@thehauer) July 22, 2018
3. R for Data Science by @StatGarrett and @hadleywickham. Reproducible research is so much easier to do in R. For an introduction to writing Tidy code, it’s tough to find a better resource. I found R much later in my grad career than I would've liked. https://t.co/PoFWXpm8dh 5/12
— Matt Hauer (@thehauer) July 22, 2018
2. Ten simple rules for structuring papers by @spiralmensh and @koerding. In my experience, grad school taught me to write but it didn’t necessarily teach me to write *well*. This is a fantastic overview of how to structure a scientific paper https://t.co/rubY87vKP5 4/12
— Matt Hauer (@thehauer) July 22, 2018
This is my favorite internet discovery in a long time.
— Tim Koleto 小嶺都帝夢 (@Timkoleto) July 22, 2018
This guy created new Sanrio characters using an AI predictive text to make their biographies. He then draws original designs for each one.
My favorite is “Delicious Bradley”, whose birthday is “often” 😭 Can I get a plush? pic.twitter.com/9F9I6vW68U
I have dyslexia.
— Bryan William Jones (@BWJones) July 22, 2018
I typically do not do well on standardized exams.
To apply for grad school, I had to take the GRE and GRE molecular biology subject exam.
I scored...OK. Not great.
I’m a professor now and believe the GRE is a useless metric, preventing many from contributing. https://t.co/Q2gQ4WvzwV
Played around with @dpkingma & @prafdhar interactive 'Glow' reversible generative model and was able to knock a few years off of Solid Snake and dye his hair.
— Jack Clark (@jackclarkSF) July 21, 2018
Blog: https://t.co/HjKlZ8okkZ
Code: https://t.co/U80xSUOUrC pic.twitter.com/LxB6l9TSCT
"There are exactly four normed division algebras: the real numbers (R), complex numbers (C), quaternions (H), and octonions (O). " I really love when @QuantaMagazine goes in depth on more obscure and under-appreciated fields. Real investigative journalism! https://t.co/kQxHVX27fm pic.twitter.com/frv1dU5NoM
— Eric Jang (@ericjang11) July 20, 2018
Data Science and Robots Blog by @_brohrer_https://t.co/NNxYZr7ldB pic.twitter.com/pyxmE8sNKN
— ML Review (@ml_review) July 20, 2018
this is so clever. "The Dyslexie font is specially designed for people with dyslexia, in order to make reading easier" https://t.co/4nIdazS38m pic.twitter.com/zmHunxLdzd
— Isaac Hepworth (@isaach) July 19, 2018