what are you currently learning on your own and how are you learning it?
What are you currently learning on your own and how are you learning it?
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How to program a quantum computer.
I'm learning Autodesk Fusion 360 while my broken foot heals
>what are you currently learning on your own and how are you learning it?
been learning web development using fullstackopen.com
Will go back to my regular Haskell studying after, just want to be at a point where I can make a half-decent website if I chose to.
I'm learning digital logic and Verilog, by playing with an online Verilog simulator and reading the Harris & Harris textbook. Wish I could just go to MIT/UC Berkeley/ETH Zurich but I'm too poor.
japanese
2h of anki every day
OpenGL with learnopengl.com
but I'm using C# and opentk because C++ can go fuck itself
Traffic theory. Never thought this would be interesting
brainlet
Java, gonna start making Android applications
yea whatever, enjoy dealing with undefined behavior, segfaults, useless error messages, 50 different ways of initializing a variable, etc, etc.
literally got running with C# and opentk in 45 seconds. A C++ retard would probably still be writing his CMakeLists.txt.
Linux, by fucking around with it
Japanese, with Anki cards, internet and textbooks
C, reading K&R
Webshit dev by day, want to gain a better understanding of the low level processes and learn a language Jow Forums won't make fun of me for
this, C# is ultra comfy
maybe you're right but giving up is even more homosexual than being an applefag and homos should be shot
How the fuck do people in Japan learn their own fucking language then?
(You)
Currently trying to learn C and bash in the hopes of someday getting out of my shitty warehouse job, i know a little more than the average user, but still kind of a brainlet by Jow Forums standards
this but chinese and change 2h to 0-4h and change anki to pleco flashcards and vocal practice
Nice. Quil?
dont ever base anything off Jow Forums standards
i am sure you are doing quite well (-:
I'm learning to draw using the "Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain" and "Perspective Made Easy" books.
python machine learning by raschka
C
also python
Nah I'm using IBM Q5 in Tenerife.
how to automate video remastering with opencv and torch
Im learning webdev shit while also studying for MSCA Server 2016 for work. I also want to get into CTF and Security too
>tfw too scatterbrained to focus on one area of study
why do people want to work on webdev though it seems like hell
Data structures and algorithms, so I can stop being a koder/kode monkey
C++11 and dusting up my template metaprogramming skills. Some electronics on the side as well, I'm making a driverless drone next week.
C
programming a game in it from scratch.
japanese
thinking of picking up either korean or chinese to boot since my language school has a decent enough discount for additional courses and I have time to spare
I'm thinking korean because I am absolutely tone deaf and as far as I could check I dont hear the chinese tones
chinese is really fucking hard. it's really fucking hard. the benefit it has over japanese is there are so many chinese speakers and they're everywhere now. if you work in tech you're probably already surrounded by chinese speakers and it's pretty cool to talk to them. I've gotten free dry cleaning from speaking chinese and restaurant discounts too which si fun. also it's helped my career overall I'd say. the advantage japanese has is that there is so much interesting japanese media, like classic games untranslated or whatever.
Because they're born Japanese.
You can learn Japanese only if you're born in Japan, or have a nanopenis.
>Anki
Are you perhaps retarded?
well I'm couple years in on the japanese investment, I don't work in tech so I'm doing this as a hobby mostly.
korean has the advantage of many cultural exports and simple writing but much like japanese it's a dying nation's language
chinese on the other hand sounds godawful, is hard but unless some cataclysm happens it's the way of the future and could maybe enhance my japanese progress.
to be perfectly honest I'm leaning towards korean still because I know I have relistically no hopes of becoming fluent in chinese in this lifetime whereas I'm pretty sure I can become at least somewhat proficient in korean and japanese
What's a better alternative for spaced repetition?
BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO BENKYO
Reading every day
also it matters what language you're interested in, if you're motivated it's a lot easier. especially for asian languages because they're all pretty damn hard. but yea I mean I gotta say it again, chinese is unbelievably hard. it's so fucking hard man. I can't believe how hard this shit is.
watch the first few minutes of youtube.com
Haskell + SFML bindings
Trying to make an asteroids clone
You mean like reading text you are unfamiliar with more than text you are familiar with, but still retreading old ground?
Spaced repetition can be used for sentences and phrases as well as isolated words.
not him but reading is basically natural spaced repetition in that rare words are naturally spaced out, the goal of spaced repetition should generally be to get to a reading level and then let reading do the rest because it's so much more effective in the long run
>max 1 month
I wish I did this back when I was learning core 2k. I ended up getting frustrated and forgot probably more than 90% of the words.
I should have done what I did when I was learning English.
Now I don't have as much time as before to start again.
Life is a fucking nightmare.
That neocities link doesn't work for me but sweet god that website is a goldmine. I found some super rare PC-98 ROMs. Thanks, user!
How do you guys get yourself to jump into learning a new thing, and to stick with it?
It's summer and I've got a fuck ton of free time, but I don't have the urgency to learn a new thing before fall comes. I want to hardwire my brain into learning something without getting bored of it after 15 minutes and going back to vidya and pornhub
Abortion.
I kidnap girls at bars and then... well I'll let you figure that out for yourself.
c the hard way
from
c the hard way
Start by easing up on the vidya and pornhub
It's going to be fucking impossible to do anything if you're used to instant dopamine whenever you have a free moment. Set aside time to read a book or something for an hour and use those vices as a reward for being productive
OS development.
I’m learning it by building an operating system brick by brick. It’s fun but there’s a lot of work.
> what are you currently learning on your own
hardware drivers
> how are you learning it
very painfully
Pretty good projector that one.
Actual architecture and networking since my Master's program is shit.
i'm also learning about that, so if you have a repo, please share? i would be very much interested in reading your game's code.
>what are you currently learning on your own
How to make Bash behave like a better language.
>and how are you learning it?
By rewriting some old scripts of mine.