FFT BY HAND LFG! I work in process engineering in semiconductors and the most math I actually use on the regular is statistics, but that's largely done by software and I just have to know what it's doing in the background. I don't do a lot by hand either. Hardest math exam questions in school was this advanced stats class back in the day where the final was "here are 20 theorems, please prove any 10." The physical chem question that was particle on a sphere was also pretty hard to do with a pencil.
Always fun trying to talk about work online without doxxing yourself, especially when your job is so interesting. My work is very similar and I have had the same experience, although occasionally you need to dig up the textbooks in the rare cases that the core calculations aren't already written in Matlab.
I'm not terribly secretive about who I am admittedly, but I do have to be really careful about how much I can actually legally say about my job sometimes.
Nice run--it seemed a bit sketchy at the beginning! I'm a software engineer in the financial sector and have had to do math in order to figure out and then program many of the statistics that we calculate. Though, I generally model in Excel and then work on programming it. Hand calculating has been useful a few times to figure out how to reduce certain aspects of the calculations into something easier/more efficient to program.
You have any tips for how to get back in the zone after stepping away. I often lose a run (even from a fair position) when stepping away for an hour or two. I find it tough to get back in the proper mindset. You seemed to come back from an hour break like the champ you are.
NASA actually published a paper on it, and it's actually a pretty darned physically-accurate trajectory. It's almost optimal, too! ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20150019662.pdf
@@bagel5085 That books gets a lot of hate (mostly on Reddit, I guess, and they pretty much seem to hate everything), but I absolutely loved it. I don't care if the science wasn't super realistic--it was still fun.
Life goal: Find someone who loves me how dusk loves hot shark
Shark: GOOD!
>I hate Wildwood Sap, I hate Wildwood Sap
>We have you surrounded, come out and receive 5 stacks of regrn
FFT BY HAND LFG!
I work in process engineering in semiconductors and the most math I actually use on the regular is statistics, but that's largely done by software and I just have to know what it's doing in the background. I don't do a lot by hand either.
Hardest math exam questions in school was this advanced stats class back in the day where the final was "here are 20 theorems, please prove any 10." The physical chem question that was particle on a sphere was also pretty hard to do with a pencil.
I did an integral recently haha. Within the last year, I think I also solved an ODE! Still got it! (I had to Google some parts)
Always fun trying to talk about work online without doxxing yourself, especially when your job is so interesting. My work is very similar and I have had the same experience, although occasionally you need to dig up the textbooks in the rare cases that the core calculations aren't already written in Matlab.
I'm not terribly secretive about who I am admittedly, but I do have to be really careful about how much I can actually legally say about my job sometimes.
I swear every time you pick up Gifts for a Guard you have to talk yourself into it
Nice run--it seemed a bit sketchy at the beginning!
I'm a software engineer in the financial sector and have had to do math in order to figure out and then program many of the statistics that we calculate. Though, I generally model in Excel and then work on programming it. Hand calculating has been useful a few times to figure out how to reduce certain aspects of the calculations into something easier/more efficient to program.
No Restore, but still regen galore
You have any tips for how to get back in the zone after stepping away. I often lose a run (even from a fair position) when stepping away for an hour or two. I find it tough to get back in the proper mindset.
You seemed to come back from an hour break like the champ you are.
Take a few minutes and review your deck a few times to make sure you know your game plan! That's definitely my #1 recommendation.
Explain the Rich Purnell Maneuver, you're basically that dude.
NASA actually published a paper on it, and it's actually a pretty darned physically-accurate trajectory. It's almost optimal, too! ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20150019662.pdf
@@RisingDusk welp, this is cool as fuck. Andy Weir is a national treasure. If you hear of any papers on the Hail Mary Project send them my way!
@@bagel5085 That books gets a lot of hate (mostly on Reddit, I guess, and they pretty much seem to hate everything), but I absolutely loved it. I don't care if the science wasn't super realistic--it was still fun.
@@lyrrakell out of his books i think Artemis is the most mid one, but even that was fun.
Why wouldn’t you just reset when Tethys dropped in front of shark?
I don't reset on my Train of Thought series.
Do not use Matlab for creating Orbituaries. People get gravely upset
Booo! (But also: Nice!)