u/LostDog_88

Image 1 — 1st Trip abroad, Cambodia, back in 2019
Image 2 — 1st Trip abroad, Cambodia, back in 2019
Image 3 — 1st Trip abroad, Cambodia, back in 2019
Image 4 — 1st Trip abroad, Cambodia, back in 2019
Image 5 — 1st Trip abroad, Cambodia, back in 2019
Image 6 — 1st Trip abroad, Cambodia, back in 2019
▲ 14 r/travel

1st Trip abroad, Cambodia, back in 2019

I visited Cambodia pretty long ago, but couldn't share the pics as I lost my old hard drive!

Its so beautiful, and calm. Love SEA and surrounding countries!

It was my first international trip as a student with a few college friends! Stayed there for around 5days! Visited a bunch of ancient temples, like the famous Angkor Wat(1st, 2nd Image). Its said to be the largest religions complex in the world, which is pretty crazy.

We then visited the floating villages(3rd and 4th images) on a small boat.. They had a few crocodiles in pits, had no idea what that was(do u guys know what its about?), but it was very cool nonetheless to see houses floating(have never seen anything as such before).

We went on a few hikes to look at ancient rock carvings of deities(5th and 6th images) which were found in the woods after years of being missing(this is what the tour guide told us).

Climate wise, it was pretty hot, but bearable- Loved visiting and learning about ancient cultures! It was a great 1st intl trip!

u/LostDog_88 — 16 hours ago

Tech related Sidehustle (2months)

Im free for 2 months from this weekend. Is there some tech sidehustle i can do? Im fine with non-tech as well, but i specialize in tech roles! I wanna earn atleast 1K per week if possible?* thankyou!

Pls no surveys like Attapol! Ive tried it, it gives surveys for a few days and it just goes blank later-

reddit.com
u/LostDog_88 — 2 days ago
▲ 3 r/kth

Courses and Credits

I'm an undergrad student currently going through universities to apply for my masters. I came across KTH, and as far as I've seen, it has really good reputation, and its courses look amazing, and is pretty much what I want to study/research about. However, I had a few questions on how Course selection and Credits totaling occurs.

I'm specifically looking at the Msc in CS section, and its courses. Credits should in theory total upto 120 by the end of the 2nd year if im not wrong(the page says each term is approx 30 credits).

As far as what the page says about mandatory course selections, there are 5 mandatory courses each 6 credits, 2 mandatory courses with 2 credits each. Then there's the thesis which is 30credits.

There are various tracks(for example, im more interested in the Parallel Computation track), where each subtrack has 3 mandatory courses 7.5credits each, and one course which can be chosen, so 7.5 credits for that. This is for both the years, year 1 and 2.

  1. Doesn't the total go up 124ish? Then why do they also show recommended/conditionally elective courses, if the total of all the mandatory courses already goes past the limit of 120 credits? (I don't mind learning more, but some colleges put a hard limit on the credit limit, so does KTH do something like that?)

  2. The page shows the same courses for the same subtrack in year 1 and year 2. How does that work? Do we select a different subtrack in each year? or is there something else that im missing?

  3. I've already studied some of the mandatory courses such as Computer Security, AI, Advanced Algorithms, etc in my Bachelors, and I have read about credit transfers/course replacements. How does that work in KTH? What other courses can/should I replace it with?

Thank you so much!

reddit.com
u/LostDog_88 — 7 days ago

The generic version of the Heisenberg Uncertainty describes that momentum and position of a wave isnt knowable at an instant.

Now, I am not a physicists, but i do love to read about things every now and then. I see most other people explain the Uncertainty as something thats real, and not just a measurement inaccuracy.

However, Ive also tried my best to understand the reason, and i currently understand its due to a problem of how the logic works in Fourier Transformation, and hence why the uncertainty is linked to reality...

If math is just the current best description humans can come up with, of reality, what if someone comes up with a better logical version of the Fourier transform sometime in the future which can easily describe(or maybe redefine) waves that are both localised in space and frequency, wouldn't that break the Heisenberg's Uncertainty rule?

So is the Uncertainty really linked to reality around us? or is it linked to how we can express waves in our current mathematical language?

(and even if thats the case, has someone proved however a wave may be described/reimagined even in the future, it can never have both local space/frequency, and hence re-anchoring the uncertainty back to reality)

reddit.com
u/LostDog_88 — 15 days ago