According to Science, Laziness can be a sign of high intelligence.
SCIENCE

No title available
taylor price
wallacepolsom
sheepfilms

blake kathryn

JVL
No title available
almost home

tannertan36
One Nice Bug Per Day

roma★
Today's Document
ojovivo

Origami Around

Kaledo Art
Stranger Things

@theartofmadeline
AnasAbdin

Discoholic 🪩

No title available
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Italy
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia

seen from Russia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
seen from India
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Belgium

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
@engineers-online
According to Science, Laziness can be a sign of high intelligence.
SCIENCE
When we ask people to save something, we talk about what is important to us. When we say, “Save the date 📅,” we tell others that date is what is important to us. If you say, “Rikk…
A quick note about what is most important in our fight against breast cancer.
slow down
take your time
it'll be alright
3 Nephi 22:11
“11 O thou afflicted, tossed with tempest, and not comforted! Behold, I will lay thy stones with fair colors, and lay thy foundations with sapphires.”
15th september: guess who now understands trigonometric substitution? well, i thought it was me, and then i got to the last question, and now i wonder if anyone does. ft: david spiegelhalter and my absolutely gorgeous new loclen pen!
Two ways of teaching Git
Source: https://twitter.com/heyjulesfern/status/1311700463876595713?s=21
03.05.2020 - 07.05.2020
Day 11/100 - Day 15/100
Lots of C language notes. I have been simultaneously doing the online course and I always forget the semicolon 🤦
08.05.2020 - 13.05.2020
Day 16/100 - 21/100
The first photo is a code required for the code that spans the remaining three photos. This latter code is my solution to Harvard CS50x's Problem Set 1 : Credit and it took me nearly 5 days to make it work properly.
The problem was to basically use Luhn's algorithm to identify whether the number accepted from the user might be a credit card number or not. Then to determine whether the card is an AMEX, MasterCard or VISA.
I finally managed to complete it and wrote it down along with the thought process behind what I have done so I don't forget it.
academia things that genuinely make me happy:
large textbooks filled with extra papers which hold the answers to the problems you thought were too brilliant to be thrown away, or the simple short summary of a part you were struggling to understand before
having your textbook absolutely ruined by highlighters and sticky notes all over it, those little tips and ideas you picked up from the lesson. anyone who opens that book immediately knows that you’ve studied the crap out of it and know the concept by heart. “this is the most annotated book i’ve ever seen” is literally the highest form of compliment for me.
solving math or chemistry problems to a soundtrack album or ambient sounds, extra points if it’s in afternoon lol
when you’re so focused and keen on getting to the final answer that your hand physically can’t keep up with your eagerness so you end up with the most incoherent solution. but you’ve finally got the answer right!
being self-taught in a subject or a few chapters of the textbook, and still smashing the quizzes and the exams
coming up with a new solution to the problem, or seeing the problem from a new perspective, and finally being able to solve it because of just that.
confidently walking out of the exam room. 0 doubt in your mind that you crushed it!
actually feeling how you’ve grown academically, and how much more knowledgeable you are compared to the beginning of the semester
casually and confidently having conversations with a professor about your studies, exchanging ideas and discussing the existing theories, methods, on-going research and all
all of this is everything i want in life- god
Date : 14.05.2020 - 22.05.2020
Day 22/100 - 30/100
I haven't posted in a while, not because I was unproductive but because I had no photos to post.
For the past 9 days, I have been doing problems and challenges from the above book. No notes or explanations. Just read a structure or concept, implement it, repeat.
The book is almost done. I think I have a decent grasp on C now, although I still feel a bit weird about pointers.
Day 30 - day 58
May 23rd to June 19th: It's been a weird period. I have been learning excel, PowerPoint and R language for the past month, completely online. The exercises are online as well so I haven't taken any notes. As a peace offering, above is a picture of my notes on radiation
Supply chain drivers and metrics
It's all very interesting but complicated. I am using the flow method of note taking to make sure it gets imprinted on my brain.
20.08.2020 🌻
Back in business! My first week as a master student is almost over, and it's been a blast 🌞 I'm very excited to be back on tumblr as well!
Currently preparing for a radiobiology discussion class on basic cell biology 🥰
An Overview of Note-Taking Styles
Note-taking is one of the most essential skills a student should master. It allows you to record and review information to be used in the future. But what’s the best way to do so? Here’s an overview of note-taking styles that can help you maximize your learning!
it’s ok to:
feel disappointed/sad/lonely
get anxious
not get the grades you want
because:
tomorrow is a new start
you’ve grown so much
and i’m proud of you
27.05.2020 ~
Finished my summary of Maxwell's equations 😁 Complete with a list of all the variables and components explained.
Also: the covariant form of Maxwell's equations might be the most beautiful result in physics! 🌻
Crab Canon, M.C. Escher
https://www.wikiart.org/en/m-c-escher/crab-canon