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S.o.s!!

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  • Re: S.o.s!!

    Whatever dude. This is dumb.
    this post = teh win.

    Comment


    • Re: S.o.s!!

      I must hand it to Siamanto. No one holds grudges like him/her
      Achkerov kute.

      Comment


      • Re: S.o.s!!

        Well unfortunatley for him, he is proving my point. I have told him for days how he shouldn't rely on these random websites for all his facts (especially in drawing negative conclusions -- as in from something not on a site). Now he is crying about how I have manipulated a website to my advantage.

        I don't know whether to get upset at the allegations or to thank him for proving my point so well.
        this post = teh win.

        Comment


        • Re: S.o.s!!

          Originally posted by Sip View Post
          Whatever dude. This is dumb.
          Yes, that was dumb, even for you. What were you thinking?
          I hope that you will also stop your pointless and cry baby PMs. Thanks!






          Originally posted by Sip View Post
          Well unfortunatley for him, he is proving my point. I have told him for days how he shouldn't rely on these random websites for all his facts (especially in drawing negative conclusions -- as in from something not on a site). Now he is crying about how I have manipulated a website to my advantage.

          I don't know whether to get upset at the allegations or to thank him for proving my point so well.
          LOL You have changed your mind? What happened? Mr. Bigmouth could not hold all that hot air inside? Maybe Katchn Nazar was encouraged by Anonymouse's post?
          Mr. Hot Air, you made so many irrelevant comments and aren't you the the idiot who presented that exact "random site" - recently tempered - as "trustworthy" to make your point?

          What a clown!
          Last edited by Siamanto; 07-17-2007, 04:08 PM.
          What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

          Comment


          • Re: S.o.s!!

            Originally posted by Anonymouse View Post
            I must hand it to Siamanto. No one holds grudges like him/her

            More of your cheap calumniation??? At least, they're foolish enough to sound like jokes and amuse me.

            Considering that you have systematically brought up the past with such obsession all along in this thread, while I ignored them, do you honestly think your emotional obsessions are not obvious enough for the forum to see? Please keep in mind that it's really hard to miss.
            Last edited by Siamanto; 07-17-2007, 03:53 PM.
            What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

            Comment


            • Re: S.o.s!!

              Siamanto, at least you have been the most entertaining thing to hit this forum in the past couple of years.
              this post = teh win.

              Comment


              • Re: S.o.s!!

                Originally posted by Siamanto View Post
                Yes, a dream come true to discuss algorithms and Programming on a forum....maybe, when I was in college????
                I would have considered exchanging ideas if it was about more evolved, current and challenging domains, aspects or issues of IT/CS.
                I would suggest a look at this article:

                Consumers and companies increasingly depend on a hidden mathematical world


                It is a fairly light read targeted at a broad audience so hopefully it won't be too confusing for your highness. It might give you an idea why you shouldn't be so quick to dismiss algorithms as child's play if you consider yourself a serious computer scientist who is willing to keep up with the times and not assume what he or she learned "back in college" is still relevant.
                this post = teh win.

                Comment


                • Re: S.o.s!!

                  Originally posted by Sip View Post
                  I would suggest a look at this article:

                  Consumers and companies increasingly depend on a hidden mathematical world


                  It is a fairly light read targeted at a broad audience so hopefully it won't be too confusing for your highness. It might give you an idea why you shouldn't be so quick to dismiss algorithms as child's play if you consider yourself a serious computer scientist who is willing to keep up with the times and not assume what he or she learned "back in college" is still relevant.
                  I wonder how many times a simple statement should be repeated before you finally grasp it: Nobody is "dismissing algorithms as child's play" or as irrelevant; however, they are not challenges anymore.

                  I hope that someday you will get out of the hole that has been Academia during the last two decades - I mean in Computer Science - and be exposed to real "enterprise level" projects. Actually, during the last decades, CS evolved thanks to the non-Academic organizations and efforts; while the contribution of Academia has been minor, if not negligible.

                  Let's see how many more times the above simple statement will have to be repeated???
                  What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

                  Comment


                  • Re: S.o.s!!

                    In the 11th hour of this discussion, I thought I'd put my two "kopeks" in.

                    In my mind, computer science has the two key aspects: the theory, which is mathematical in nature, and implementation, which is based on writing an efficient algorithm that implements the developed theory. You can have a beautiful theory, but in computer science, developing an efficient and correct algorithm for the theory is almost as important.

                    As an example, different rich machine learning theories and principles would not be as relevant without clever and robust algorithms that realize these principles. As such, these algorithms can be and indeed are very complex. And a computer scientist's job is not only to devise theories but also develop tractable algorithms. In certain cases, algorithm construction is a theory in itself.

                    There are countless examples of this. By the way, here's an interesting fact: the linear programming problem was first shown to be solvable in polynomial time by Leonid Khachiyan in 1979.

                    So, I would say, whether algorithms are relevant or not, depends on which type of an algorithm is in question. I'm currently working on an algorithm for a machine learning classifier idea I have thought up. Making the algorithm outperform the competition speedwise is big challenge.

                    Comment


                    • Re: S.o.s!!

                      Originally posted by karoaper View Post
                      In the 11th hour of this discussion, I thought I'd put my two "kopeks" in.

                      In my mind, computer science has the two key aspects: the theory, which is mathematical in nature, and implementation, which is based on writing an efficient algorithm that implements the developed theory. You can have a beautiful theory, but in computer science, developing an efficient and correct algorithm for the theory is almost as important.

                      As an example, different rich machine learning theories and principles would not be as relevant without clever and robust algorithms that realize these principles. As such, these algorithms can be and indeed are very complex. And a computer scientist's job is not only to devise theories but also develop tractable algorithms. In certain cases, algorithm construction is a theory in itself.

                      There are countless examples of this. By the way, here's an interesting fact: the linear programming problem was first shown to be solvable in polynomial time by Leonid Khachiyan in 1979.

                      So, I would say, whether algorithms are relevant or not, depends on which type of an algorithm is in question. I'm currently working on an algorithm for a machine learning classifier idea I have thought up. Making the algorithm outperform the competition speedwise is big challenge.
                      karoaper,

                      The issue is not theory vs. implementation - by the way, even when it comes to Algorithmics one can distinguish theory and implementation.
                      Also, I have never said that algorithms are not relevant. As I've told Sip, in my previous post:
                      "I wonder how many times a simple statement should be repeated...: Nobody is "dismissing algorithms as child's play" or as irrelevant; however, they are not challenges anymore."

                      Lacking time, I will be as succint as possible!

                      The point is that, though algorithms are used in order to implement solutions to business problems, they are fairly well known/understood and are not challenges anymore; however, the following - to name only a few - are far more crucial challenges. They are not theoretical issues; those are real problems that enterprises face on a daily basis and their solutions include myriad of different algorithms. Each of the following present many challenges and it is beyond the scope of my reply to even enumerate them.

                      1- Repeatability in software production: of course, it is a challenge when many hundreds are involved in the process and the different teams - client, managers, business analysts, architects, development teams, QA technicians, admins etc. - are geographically distributed. It's also about scale. This is not about "college level" projects where small teams are involved, having an almost flat organizational structure and almost total lack of process. Also, college projects are not deployed on thousands of sites, not used by thousands of users and not maintained for the next decade or so by hundreds of different developers

                      2- Reusability of software artifacts in order to improve quality, reduce costs, manage risks...

                      3- Data Integration and sharing between business partners and within different departments of an enterprise

                      4- Integration of components developed by different teams into complex systems as solutions to business problems; solutions that can gracefully be extended, maintained and evolve

                      5- Performance, Scalability i.e. millions of transactions and huge grids where failure is not an option. Keep in mind that the number of transactions and processing are increasing exponentially and solutions are expected to stay operational for at least 10+ years

                      6- ....

                      In a different thread, I used the metaphor of a shack - that can be built by a small team or an individual - and high traffic modern airport - that requires the collaboration of many organizations and involve many different technologies. A shack can be "hacked" with simple tools and algorithms; a high traffic airport can only be built with a completely different set of tools, technologies, standards, practices, organization, process, methodologies etc. that include a myriad of algorithms, but the algorithms are not the challenge.
                      As I see it, Sip does not see beyond the challenges of building a shack. A high traffic airport is a reality, not theory.
                      Last edited by Siamanto; 09-24-2007, 09:47 PM.
                      What if I find someone else when looking for you? My soul shivers as the idea invades my mind.

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