@@user-g7y2v If you're 2k elo I absolutely hope you can. It shows more than just being good at chess, it shows how you can work hard and are an eager learner
when you feel the urge that you need to study you will study till your mind feels like your good. (in my case). I have gone consistently 12 hours aday for 6 days straight when i look back on it i really dont know how i did that but it was just some flowstate.
Theory of Computation for us was a whole separate class, in fact we had theory of computation and algos on the same level and we only needed one, so I haven't taken theory of computation.
@@EatingWaffles It’s hard to say that I’ve “never” used discrete math. I think it’s all about a foundation in the way we think about engineering processes and logical thinking. The ability to use the ideas and thinking process from discrete math in your own work is, I think, the real benefit in most software engineer roles. The actual math of it though, and diagrams, etc, is rarely used in my experience. Actually trying to learn it though will help you tremendously!
I'm a high school senior getting ready to go to Texas A&M for engineering. Any general advice you have that you wish you knew? regarding uni, careers, the future etc?
@@Jacob-lm1cs Depends on the engineering. But, as best as you can, I'd recommend: -Use every resource at your disposal (Google, TH-cam, professors, tutors, create study groups, etc) to learn and study the material for your classes (it'll suck at times, but you will not regret it when you leave college) -Professors, TAs, and Tutors are there FOR YOU. YOU ARE PAYING FOR THEM. My biggest regret is not going to more office hours and getting to know professors until too late. There are no dumb questions, and they are EXPERTS in their field trying to help you! -Depending on your major, some fields are saturated- so do stuff in uni to stand out. Clubs, projects, make connections, but also enjoy your time! Just make the most of it. Don't waste it. It's expensive, worth it, full of resources, lots of things to do and people to meet. Good luck!
I was actually failure for maths in school days, but in uni, I was able to ace discrete math, probability and statistics, and even theory of computation... I just had to open the damn textbook.
This is honestly the problem a lot of high school and uni students have. The courses are made to be passable, they're not trying to fuck over your future. All you have to do is put in the effort to understand the material.
I don't know how I stumbled upon this video, and I don't know how I skipped directly to this part, and the rant from 1:59:42 was totally accurate, and surprising coming from a student! I've been in industry for 10 years now. I've seen others around me get laid off even in times that weren't as extreme as the recent layoffs, and those who were good to work with, and had the skills to truly bring value to the team, were always kept around.
wait really? i skipped to the timestamp expecting something good but i think it sounded kinda ignorant and like he froze up and just said whatever without really thinking about what he was saying. well i agree with the first part obviously about pursuing what you want but the part where he defends the companies for laying people off is kinda silly to me. but the part that really made me have to comment is when he said twitter is thriving despite the layoffs. like that is just not true at all and pretty delusional to say. since you guys probably base everything on financial performance, they're going down like a billion in revenue every year. and plenty of employees said that the layoffs caused technical problems to the point that they were having to sleep at the office and work insane hours to keep up with the issues. idk i think it's crazy to say that the companies are in the right to not value their employees and to try to squeeze as much work possible out of the smallest number of people to save money.
He speaks true that you need to be better than the basic riffraff for SURE. But to say the job market isn’t shit and won’t get even shittier for tech is just not true. Once AI truly hits the scenes, it’ll be game over essentially. I wouldn’t tell my worst enemy to start a CS degree right now unless they were extremely passionate about it and had what it took to become a top coder
@@juggles5474 Why would the introduction of AI make it worse? It'll make it way better since the demand for AI skills are gonna go up, and the market's gonna thrive.
As a CS grad from 2019, I was happy that I could still do the first problem. It’s funny in retrospect how Automata and Discrete classes actually do matter a lot (students usually feel like they are weird classes). They make you better at general problem solving, and at thinking of programs as a set of states, instead of processes or tasks. Best of luck on your finals.
Thanks for sharing, Scott! As someone who has absolutely 0 hours credited towards a CS degree, I feel properly humbled now thinking i could take on the first problem. If only my Lesbian Dance Theory degree required some type of classes in computers!
I have no idea what is going on, just stumbled upon this video in my recommendations, but I just wanna say THANK YOU. This just motivated me to study harder for reasons I dont know why.
i just got a passing grade in computational optimazation 2, this was the hardest course of my uni career so far, i'm just extremely glad i'm done with it (i am in my 3rd year of a maths bsc) Good luck on the exam fellas!
I was stuck on Discrete math as my last course from july 2021 to march 2024. Didn't help that I had a borderline insane professor who routinely fails 50 out of 53 students on an exam. Just looking at algebraic structures still gives me PTSD. I still have nightmares of doing an exam and simply not being able to solve anything. Thank your for reading my trauma-dump. For anyone struggling with this, I have three words for you - never give up.
- Enters the video - "Hoo man, glad I have not to study this anymore, poor guy" - Skips to the middle - Understands nothing - "This mans browser has to feel overwhelmed af, he has more tabs than me neurons left" - Skips to the begin, lets see if I can catch something - Solves this 2:59 in paper to proof I didnt get dumber - Discrete math never again, closes the video
Discrete Math was the reason I dropped out of my CS degree in germany, still landed a decent job with the skills I earned but the course had no business being so damn hard. It was a first semester course too, shit was brutal
They want to create a Top Class Software Developer. Really liked this here in my country we have Degree Factories ...sell as many seats and get x no of students to profit from. After graduation they don't know shit about CS and work €180/ months for a shitty job. I'm glad in your college first year was very tough because the market is also very brutal.
It's the same in all of Europe, especially where education is "free". Since you don't pay for it, they make sure they get rid of most students in the first year.
I study business informatics in germany, and it's fascinating to see the similarities in our coursework despite the distance. We have subjects like Analysis and Linear Algebra, which are fundamental in both math and computer science. Additionally, we delve into sets and other theoretical foundations of computer science. It's so cool that we are so far apart but are tackling the same mathematical challenges. Love it, keep it up!
Your university should've not named it 'business analytics' if you end up studying theoretical CS. You should've learned PowerBI/Tableau, Excel, and most importantly databases/SQL. Your rector isn't able to distinguish CS and Business Analytics.
thank god I'm done with that painful course. I'm in my third year of CS now, and I will be taking Automata and Language Theory next term, which requires Discrete Math as a prerequisite in our curriculum... (the course title sounds scary ngl😢)
Ive majored in CS in my small town university, but the things they taught us were just a fraction of this. Just segments if I was to take these courses whole I wouldnt survive lmao
I took this in university, and it was beyond human compression, at least for me. I failed, but i was also barely paying attention. I have been considered as a math genius until i met this
Got a 1st in my bachelors in IT 4 years ago, since then I've not used any of the discrete mathematics that I learnt and have forgotten the vast majority of it. I do remember though that p definitely equals np👍🏼 And the guy that invented the shortest path algorithm has the longest path name to pronounce.
@@Lol99410 Hi sorry for the late reply. I do think an IT degree is still valuable for sure. But to stand out you should focus on a specific area of IT and try to figure out what you want to do as early as possible and build your CV around it
@@happywednesday6741im a rising senior in highschool right now looking to major in CS or IT, i wanna do IT but ive heard a CS degree holds more weight in the “real world” is that true ?
@clipwtf no, it depends on the specialization. example: many cs degrees are becoming homogenized and you'd stand out if you got a masters. IT can be more specific. do whatever INTERESTS you, not what you think will make more money. that will come eventually. former Berkeley and UC Irvine student. good luck.
As a sophomore in high school this just looks so complicated but I feel like I have the potential too learn it like it looks hard but if I actually took the time to learn it I would eat fr
@j6lkx5kt31 currently 2 years full time experience, a little over 100k. It's not bad (this probably sounds amazing, but I live in California where that is like barely enough for average apartment)
@j6lkx5kt31 also it depends what field of swe you go into, and the company, varies greatly. My first job was 86.5k right out of college, held it for 9 months before company went through mass layoffs (infamous 2022-23 tech layoffs), got this position in web app and ai integration
Can someone coherently explain why willpower is not considered genetical? Like, yeah, I understand that mastery is 5% talent and 95% work, that all geniuses worked their ass off, and technically, i can as well. But to start working you ass off, you need to have basic amount of descipline to not fail immediately and be consistent. And to even start developing your discipline, you need to have some basic amount of will power, which is either genetical, or built in childhood by your parents in case they're strict. And examples of people who lack this "basic willpower" are seen everywhere: Failed student, alcohol/smoking/porn addicts, obeese people. Each one of them perfectly understands that whetever they're onto is bad, yet cannot help themselves but to continue. Why so?? If you ask each one of them, it will turn out they all want to be fit/educated/healthy, but for some reason ultimately fail. How can you explain that? That "they dont ACTUALLY want it"? Well, its still not their fault, because you arent choosing what you want, it is a collective of you genes and past experience/ circumstances. People often equate the physical ability to do something to an actual feasibility of it. Physically, you can jump of the rooftop right now, but there is ~0% chance you will be able to overcome your self-preservation instinct. Same with procrastination, if one doesnt got the fire in him to overcome the softening effect of modern conveniences, he might just end up not being able to change his life, simply because of bad luck. And yeah, i understand that this all sounds like a massive cope, and if youre gonna give up at the start youre never gonna find out if you have this "fire" in the first place. But im just tired of everyone endlessly putting the blame on people for "not working enough", its like saying "youre not praying enough if you dont feel gods pressence. Youre not believing sincerely enough if you dont fell blessed, try harder". All this productivity bros are just cultist, who will never understand that you just CANT become whoever you want. Not everyone can become a president, not everyone can become a millionaire, not everyone can study for 9+ hours or be productive 24/7, because not everyone can even quit fucking smoking cigarettes.
Tenacity is a result of how you see yourself and the world. you can try grind 12 hours a day to be successful, but if you don’t believe you can finish it and the world is just unfair, then you won’t make it. And the willpower to keep going comes from knowing how to not overwhelm yourself with the long road ahead. You don’t think “oh yeah 9 hours should do”. You think “well I made it to this hour, maybe another won’t hurt”, and so on.
Anyone can do anything, most won't. If you live your entire life with determinist thinking you definitely won't achieve anything. Exercise your free will, don't be a cog in the machine.
You expressed everything I’ve been wanting to say for so long, but couldn’t find the words. I’m one of those addicts too; even though I work everyday with a stable job but what you said about wanting to change ;t struggling with discipline really resonates with me. I constantly procrastinate about my real future, only to realize later that I was stuck in a false reality I had created. I believe procrastination, especially with the influence of music in today's world, becomes a crutch-a way to escape the present, forget the past, and fantasize about a fake future. The environment and people around you play a key role too.
There’s an experiment done on twins who grew up on different environments. One grew up with poor family, others grew up with rich family. As they grew older they’re 99% identical in terms of looks, personality, intelligence and other traits.
I once did 11h of studying marathon in college, I regret that stupidity to this day. Working 'hard' simply is not enough. Some people are gifted, provided they reinforce that with appropriate effort and dedication not just drilling.
I was thrown into discrete math in my 1st semester of CS as freshman... it was a total weed out course. Oh, just looked at your profile. We went to the same school lol.
Wow i passed exam this year on discret math in my uni in Russia and i didnt know that somebody in another countries learn it too, very interesting subject, good luck gang🙏
For sure lmao. I am probably 0.01% as smart as this guy and I have a pretty decent SWE job in the US. College is hard but it’s not the real world and never will be. You just need to get your hands dirty with internships and experience and projects.
lowkey if you ahvent already looked into. theres research on using the structure of the fly brain (drosophila for my bio people) and using that to help with modeling neural networks understadnding better connectivity.
How are you possible😢 I really love studying i also study for hours but your really killing this thing I mean come on 9 hours thats some insane discipline What drives you? What moves you? How are you possible?😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱
im in my last years of high school and never had anything close to this, i wanted to go for a CS degree but after seeing this i think i should reconsider that choice lmao
@@moonscore77Cs is very math heavy, at least when you’re in uni. The job market is over saturated right now so it’s very hard to get a job unless you stand out. It’s not a guaranteed type of job unless you work super hard. As for med it is also painful in the whole studying process, but higher chance of getting a job, almost a guarantee since med field still needs a lot of people. Just do what you’re passionate about the most, and don’t think about the salary. Bc your life would be miserable if you’re not passionate about these two, bc they requires effort and interest to learn
Its all impressive to see a kid do this stuff then you do your research on him and see he comes from a upper middle/high class upbringing. Dude went to Vermont Academy which is $38k - 70k tuition per year. and then to another high school which is 18k or so per year. Stop comparing yourself to people born with opportunities like this and access to great education and family structure right off the bat. He's literally going for BS in Math/CS as well as Applied/Engineering Physics, this is practically unobtainable for a large majority of people. This dude also saying the CS market isn't shit at 2:00:00 is kind of hilarious because it is quite literally statistically dogshit, look at the mass post covid layoffs, proceeds to say its shit if you're a bad programmer and good if you have undeniable skills? Like no duh dude, if you're a absolute beast ofc you're still getting a job and if you've always been shit it's even harder, the difference being its harder for the average person to get a job in the industry. I'm honestly not even hating but the lack of transparency and being slightly out of touch does not help
I attend georgia tech and i gotta admit u guys at umd are actully insane when it comes to CS. I teamed up with a dude from umd for hackgt , and met a lot of other CS folks from there and everyone was cracked. And then i stumble across this vid, good stuff
I think its because they inherently want to do what they do. Intrinsic goal so it comes within and him working and learning towards that goals prob gives him positive feedback loops to continue on like hes sort of content in a way i assume.
I genuinely enjoy mathemathics, so its easier to put such a large amount of time into it for me but 9 hrs in a sitting is still crazy imo and not even good for retaining info.
@@ramiensharifi6591 whats ur sweet spot for studying? Also Id like to agree with your retention point but its hard to tell how his brain works and if it actually works for him rather than a structure of time blocks throughout the day.
To the person in chat that said A levels are the same difficulty of SAT exams. You have obviously never taken an A level Exam. If you had taken an A level exam, I will assume that you failed. EDIT: just read that you are 16 but regardless my point stands I took both in 2021 and I think an ape with less hair than a seagull could pass an SAT exam blindfolded. I dont mean to be rude its just rude to discredit all the A level students that worked so hard for their results. - yes SAT students worked hard too, but you did not do as much as the a level student I dont care. Its the truth. Yes there are less subjects in A levels but the depth that the courses go into are much deeper. dont believe me? Tell me what a Boson Quartet is. oh you dont know? Well I learned that in 2019 in Physics A-Level. Put quite simply, American education needs to change. - Dom Germany 22
2:50:50 BRO LOL I wonk for a company called Ceramic Pro LLC. They call all of their apparel and merchandise CP. I never thought of that but now it makes things weird wtf
just saw his resume.
bro is 2k elo chess player, div 1 ice hockey player, 3.9 gpa student in majoring in physics-computer science. that's crazy
dam where does he go to school?
you can add chess elo to you resume?
@@user-g7y2v If you're 2k elo I absolutely hope you can. It shows more than just being good at chess, it shows how you can work hard and are an eager learner
@@whydoiexist-rs9wv uiuc
ACHA not NCAA, but nonetheless still really impressive because I cannot imagine balancing school and sports as a student athlete
me if i didnt grow up playing video games
realest comment I’ve seen
8:50:30
@azca. no way u watched all this
Real as’f
who actually wants to be that? thats slavery
Jaden smith really change career paths
Lmao😂
He wanted to contribute to the political and economic state of the world
@@sonofaclown826 lol
Lmaooo
@@sonofaclown826😂😂
bro studying for 9 hours straight is crazy
Brother you are not ready for Uni
How's that crazy? During exams that's completely normal in university.
when you feel the urge that you need to study you will study till your mind feels like your good. (in my case). I have gone consistently 12 hours aday for 6 days straight when i look back on it i really dont know how i did that but it was just some flowstate.
@@maggotfeast Unless you are cramming, no, that is not normal. Studying should be split into smaller sessions for optimal retention
9 hrs a day is not healthy.@@maggotfeast
Learning Theory of Computation in a Discrete Maths course is insane 💀
I think its done in most computer science-related degrees
@@pablo506yup, my intro to discrete was through a class that used to be a grad level class…😊
@@pablo506 yup but in discrete maths ? Doesn't make sense lmfao
I thought the same thing. Isn't the first question about automata theory?
Theory of Computation for us was a whole separate class, in fact we had theory of computation and algos on the same level and we only needed one, so I haven't taken theory of computation.
I didnt understand a single thing
mmm its too easy
@@TurboGamasek228It's easy because you studied....A CS student wouldn't understand anything about biology
That makes the 2 of us
@@convolutionalnn2582 Not really, many things like induction, for instance, are taught in schools in Germany.
me either 😂
I’ll stick to working at McDonalds thanks
It's okay school is not for everyone lol
@@swoldier7308lmfaoo y so defensive
@@swoldier7308tf does this mean
y so pressed?
We're gonna bash someone for how they wanna live their lives.....
As a now software engineer... the ptsd is insane, but man it'd be fun to do it all again
How much of this material have you ever actually used in your career? (And please don't lie about it)
@@EatingWaffles It’s hard to say that I’ve “never” used discrete math. I think it’s all about a foundation in the way we think about engineering processes and logical thinking. The ability to use the ideas and thinking process from discrete math in your own work is, I think, the real benefit in most software engineer roles. The actual math of it though, and diagrams, etc, is rarely used in my experience. Actually trying to learn it though will help you tremendously!
^ this is correct.
I'm a high school senior getting ready to go to Texas A&M for engineering. Any general advice you have that you wish you knew? regarding uni, careers, the future etc?
@@Jacob-lm1cs Depends on the engineering. But, as best as you can, I'd recommend:
-Use every resource at your disposal (Google, TH-cam, professors, tutors, create study groups, etc) to learn and study the material for your classes (it'll suck at times, but you will not regret it when you leave college)
-Professors, TAs, and Tutors are there FOR YOU. YOU ARE PAYING FOR THEM. My biggest regret is not going to more office hours and getting to know professors until too late. There are no dumb questions, and they are EXPERTS in their field trying to help you!
-Depending on your major, some fields are saturated- so do stuff in uni to stand out. Clubs, projects, make connections, but also enjoy your time!
Just make the most of it. Don't waste it. It's expensive, worth it, full of resources, lots of things to do and people to meet. Good luck!
I was actually failure for maths in school days, but in uni, I was able to ace discrete math, probability and statistics, and even theory of computation... I just had to open the damn textbook.
For me, mentors and instructors who actually gave a damn and took me in made my love for maths blossom.
@marcomoreno6748 how'd you get mentors?
Relatable
This is honestly the problem a lot of high school and uni students have. The courses are made to be passable, they're not trying to fuck over your future. All you have to do is put in the effort to understand the material.
wise words brother, wise words.
Nah this type of studying would have me eyeing up the bleach bottle every night 💀
Respect to this guy.
I’m crine
I don't know how I stumbled upon this video, and I don't know how I skipped directly to this part, and the rant from 1:59:42 was totally accurate, and surprising coming from a student!
I've been in industry for 10 years now. I've seen others around me get laid off even in times that weren't as extreme as the recent layoffs, and those who were good to work with, and had the skills to truly bring value to the team, were always kept around.
Wait bro what the fuck
I literally skipped to that point and thought the exact same thing
I’m being 100% deadass
I definitely agree as a (grad) student! He spoke facts
wait really? i skipped to the timestamp expecting something good but i think it sounded kinda ignorant and like he froze up and just said whatever without really thinking about what he was saying. well i agree with the first part obviously about pursuing what you want but the part where he defends the companies for laying people off is kinda silly to me.
but the part that really made me have to comment is when he said twitter is thriving despite the layoffs. like that is just not true at all and pretty delusional to say. since you guys probably base everything on financial performance, they're going down like a billion in revenue every year.
and plenty of employees said that the layoffs caused technical problems to the point that they were having to sleep at the office and work insane hours to keep up with the issues.
idk i think it's crazy to say that the companies are in the right to not value their employees and to try to squeeze as much work possible out of the smallest number of people to save money.
He speaks true that you need to be better than the basic riffraff for SURE. But to say the job market isn’t shit and won’t get even shittier for tech is just not true. Once AI truly hits the scenes, it’ll be game over essentially. I wouldn’t tell my worst enemy to start a CS degree right now unless they were extremely passionate about it and had what it took to become a top coder
@@juggles5474 Why would the introduction of AI make it worse? It'll make it way better since the demand for AI skills are gonna go up, and the market's gonna thrive.
As a CS grad from 2019, I was happy that I could still do the first problem. It’s funny in retrospect how Automata and Discrete classes actually do matter a lot (students usually feel like they are weird classes). They make you better at general problem solving, and at thinking of programs as a set of states, instead of processes or tasks.
Best of luck on your finals.
Thanks for sharing, Scott! As someone who has absolutely 0 hours credited towards a CS degree, I feel properly humbled now thinking i could take on the first problem. If only my Lesbian Dance Theory degree required some type of classes in computers!
N😅
@@colin0516 LOL
@colin0516 honestly, most of these stuff is theory and SWE roles really don't do these kind of stuff.
I'm literally building an enterprise solution with a CARC backend right now lol. Only small-minded people say these kinds of subjects are useless.
Have no idea wtf im watching at 2 am
Same lol 2 25 am
2:54 am lol
02:42 for me LOL
@@kingnero8583 our sleep schedules are cooked god dayum
@@CrimsonEquinoxx atp🗿
I have no idea what is going on, just stumbled upon this video in my recommendations, but I just wanna say THANK YOU. This just motivated me to study harder for reasons I dont know why.
good luck on the exam
This looks so hard. I’m going to cry like it’s disturbing how difficult this looks.
lmao
Crazy to think that millions across the world know how to do this easy
@@lionelmessisburner7393 there just born with it lmao
@@Winters0X2 nonsense.
@@Winters0X2 yea, I mean it’s all about genetics and environment.
Discrete math 1 and 2 were the hardest classes i did during my cs degree hands down. I dont even know how i passed.
i just got a passing grade in computational optimazation 2, this was the hardest course of my uni career so far, i'm just extremely glad i'm done with it (i am in my 3rd year of a maths bsc)
Good luck on the exam fellas!
I was stuck on Discrete math as my last course from july 2021 to march 2024. Didn't help that I had a borderline insane professor who routinely fails 50 out of 53 students on an exam.
Just looking at algebraic structures still gives me PTSD.
I still have nightmares of doing an exam and simply not being able to solve anything.
Thank your for reading my trauma-dump.
For anyone struggling with this, I have three words for you - never give up.
@@キュ-w9b is there a good curriculum or syllabus available for this course ?
Books, assignments and other course material online?
Damn man that sounds tough. Hope u doin well now
@@miratamang144 I'm a lot better now, thank you for asking :)
Glad you made it bro. ❤
@@HaxxorElite I hope and pray we all make it ❤️
i took that cs70 final last spring, got absolutely clapped
same lmfao we still declare tho
LMAOO berkeley cs70 😅
Go bears
gob ears
got my first midterm back with a 95 this morning, honestly really enjoying discrete so far. Gonna miss it come diff eqn this summer 💀
@@Syzygizing for real?
@@newchinedu859I've heard it's only as hard as calc 3
@@newchinedu859 no🤣. Taking it so far, more boring than Discrete and calc3.
N😅
Diff eq wasn't that bad. Discrete was harder imo
- Enters the video
- "Hoo man, glad I have not to study this anymore, poor guy"
- Skips to the middle
- Understands nothing
- "This mans browser has to feel overwhelmed af, he has more tabs than me neurons left"
- Skips to the begin, lets see if I can catch something
- Solves this 2:59 in paper to proof I didnt get dumber
- Discrete math never again, closes the video
Discrete Math was the reason I dropped out of my CS degree in germany, still landed a decent job with the skills I earned but the course had no business being so damn hard. It was a first semester course too, shit was brutal
They want to create a Top Class Software Developer.
Really liked this here in my country we have Degree Factories ...sell as many seats and get x no of students to profit from.
After graduation they don't know shit about CS and work €180/ months for a shitty job.
I'm glad in your college first year was very tough because the market is also very brutal.
Been there too
It's the same in all of Europe, especially where education is "free".
Since you don't pay for it, they make sure they get rid of most students in the first year.
@@blushflushwhat country in Europe are you living in that has 180 euro a month jobs
I study business informatics in germany, and it's fascinating to see the similarities in our coursework despite the distance. We have subjects like Analysis and Linear Algebra, which are fundamental in both math and computer science. Additionally, we delve into sets and other theoretical foundations of computer science. It's so cool that we are so far apart but are tackling the same mathematical challenges. Love it, keep it up!
Math is universal after all
Your university should've not named it 'business analytics' if you end up studying theoretical CS. You should've learned PowerBI/Tableau, Excel, and most importantly databases/SQL. Your rector isn't able to distinguish CS and Business Analytics.
thank god I'm done with that painful course. I'm in my third year of CS now, and I will be taking Automata and Language Theory next term, which requires Discrete Math as a prerequisite in our curriculum... (the course title sounds scary ngl😢)
Ive majored in CS in my small town university, but the things they taught us were just a fraction of this. Just segments if I was to take these courses whole I wouldnt survive lmao
On the thing about getting fired, i totally agree with you on getting fired. However, the hiring process is for sure tough right now
I can’t study for more than 1.5hrs how this dude do it for 9 without going insane is beyond me
A discrete math course covering p=no is unheard of to me. My university was lacking
i graduated from illinois in the pandemic, great school keep it up. Now im working on a career change.
drop the playlist 😭
have u found it
He have not
I legitimately got a C- in this class in freshman year… during covid too when the scoring was more lenient 😭😭😭
i hate uiuc cs
love discrete mathematics, really cool video
Wish I loved maths
N😮
Zombsroyale king wtf haven’t seen u in a minute
@@randomfellow1483fr I hate that shit
I took this in university, and it was beyond human compression, at least for me. I failed, but i was also barely paying attention. I have been considered as a math genius until i met this
same, but i'm on my 2nd try and it's all good so far
me in class 5 minutes before the exam after not studying a single thing
When I took Discrete Math at UofM someone had a breakdown right after the final exam, stuff was crazy
This looks horrid
ezzz
nah this is challenging as heck but at least this is completely optional depending what u want to do in life
@@fewkeyfewkey5414 yea I wouldn't survive. He's also doing it casually while talking to chat lol
true
He is gonna get far.
@@yurio4804dead ass
Got a 1st in my bachelors in IT 4 years ago, since then I've not used any of the discrete mathematics that I learnt and have forgotten the vast majority of it. I do remember though that p definitely equals np👍🏼 And the guy that invented the shortest path algorithm has the longest path name to pronounce.
Hey, I’m also going into getting a Bachelors in IT. How hard is your job? Is the pay good? I wanna be in tech but is it still worth it??
N😊
@@Lol99410 Hi sorry for the late reply. I do think an IT degree is still valuable for sure. But to stand out you should focus on a specific area of IT and try to figure out what you want to do as early as possible and build your CV around it
@@happywednesday6741im a rising senior in highschool right now looking to major in CS or IT, i wanna do IT but ive heard a CS degree holds more weight in the “real world” is that true ?
@clipwtf no, it depends on the specialization. example: many cs degrees are becoming homogenized and you'd stand out if you got a masters. IT can be more specific. do whatever INTERESTS you, not what you think will make more money. that will come eventually. former Berkeley and UC Irvine student. good luck.
i really need to find my way of studying session and sprint skills, thanks for your sharing
As a sophomore in high school this just looks so complicated but I feel like I have the potential too learn it like it looks hard but if I actually took the time to learn it I would eat fr
Bro anyone has the potential
You don’t have the potential if you use the phrase “eat fr”
@@loxbull7214using a harmless phrase such as “eat fr” isn’t going to affect anyone in the long term. u didnt eat fr, ur lame
@@itzcrystalzzPhrase
@@aland4448 thanks! i didn’t catch my error while i was typing that. just fixed it
I went through a semester of thie bullshit to become a software engineer and i havent utilized a single thing from it yet 😂 aaaaaaaa the pain
does it pay good?
@j6lkx5kt31 currently 2 years full time experience, a little over 100k. It's not bad (this probably sounds amazing, but I live in California where that is like barely enough for average apartment)
@j6lkx5kt31 also it depends what field of swe you go into, and the company, varies greatly. My first job was 86.5k right out of college, held it for 9 months before company went through mass layoffs (infamous 2022-23 tech layoffs), got this position in web app and ai integration
It’s good to learn things don’t strive to be mediocre because people on twitter say it’s okay
@@elnopalero4691 I never said that or believed that xD
Keep up the grind bro
Idk why im here tbh i stumble upon these
Cant believe he was playing piano the whole time too
Amazing dedication, hard to see something like this in these days.
Have been through this one (multiple times) lmao, hope you crushed it !
studying for 9 hrs in one sitting would numb my brain 😭
Can someone coherently explain why willpower is not considered genetical? Like, yeah, I understand that mastery is 5% talent and 95% work, that all geniuses worked their ass off, and technically, i can as well. But to start working you ass off, you need to have basic amount of descipline to not fail immediately and be consistent. And to even start developing your discipline, you need to have some basic amount of will power, which is either genetical, or built in childhood by your parents in case they're strict. And examples of people who lack this "basic willpower" are seen everywhere: Failed student, alcohol/smoking/porn addicts, obeese people. Each one of them perfectly understands that whetever they're onto is bad, yet cannot help themselves but to continue. Why so?? If you ask each one of them, it will turn out they all want to be fit/educated/healthy, but for some reason ultimately fail. How can you explain that? That "they dont ACTUALLY want it"? Well, its still not their fault, because you arent choosing what you want, it is a collective of you genes and past experience/ circumstances.
People often equate the physical ability to do something to an actual feasibility of it. Physically, you can jump of the rooftop right now, but there is ~0% chance you will be able to overcome your self-preservation instinct. Same with procrastination, if one doesnt got the fire in him to overcome the softening effect of modern conveniences, he might just end up not being able to change his life, simply because of bad luck.
And yeah, i understand that this all sounds like a massive cope, and if youre gonna give up at the start youre never gonna find out if you have this "fire" in the first place. But im just tired of everyone endlessly putting the blame on people for "not working enough", its like saying "youre not praying enough if you dont feel gods pressence. Youre not believing sincerely enough if you dont fell blessed, try harder". All this productivity bros are just cultist, who will never understand that you just CANT become whoever you want. Not everyone can become a president, not everyone can become a millionaire, not everyone can study for 9+ hours or be productive 24/7, because not everyone can even quit fucking smoking cigarettes.
You're forgetting small and large scale environmental factors. We don't function in a vacuum
Tenacity is a result of how you see yourself and the world. you can try grind 12 hours a day to be successful, but if you don’t believe you can finish it and the world is just unfair, then you won’t make it.
And the willpower to keep going comes from knowing how to not overwhelm yourself with the long road ahead. You don’t think “oh yeah 9 hours should do”. You think “well I made it to this hour, maybe another won’t hurt”, and so on.
Anyone can do anything, most won't. If you live your entire life with determinist thinking you definitely won't achieve anything. Exercise your free will, don't be a cog in the machine.
You expressed everything I’ve been wanting to say for so long, but couldn’t find the words. I’m one of those addicts too; even though I work everyday with a stable job but what you said about wanting to change ;t struggling with discipline really resonates with me. I constantly procrastinate about my real future, only to realize later that I was stuck in a false reality I had created. I believe procrastination, especially with the influence of music in today's world, becomes a crutch-a way to escape the present, forget the past, and fantasize about a fake future. The environment and people around you play a key role too.
There’s an experiment done on twins who grew up on different environments. One grew up with poor family, others grew up with rich family. As they grew older they’re 99% identical in terms of looks, personality, intelligence and other traits.
I once did 11h of studying marathon in college, I regret that stupidity to this day. Working 'hard' simply is not enough. Some people are gifted, provided they reinforce that with appropriate effort and dedication not just drilling.
Will of steel. Keep it up! You're inspirational
I was thrown into discrete math in my 1st semester of CS as freshman... it was a total weed out course. Oh, just looked at your profile. We went to the same school lol.
Wow i passed exam this year on discret math in my uni in Russia and i didnt know that somebody in another countries learn it too, very interesting subject, good luck gang🙏
Good luck bro, computer science at UIUC is no joke. I took CS 173 in 2017 and am happy I don’t use discrete math during my day job 😊
Wish you success and happiness bro ❤ all that work will pay off. Trust the process.
You inspired me to start studied hard bro I'm also a CS student in university, your dedication inspired me man, respect. Subscribed.
I NEEDED THIS A MONTH AGO 😭😭😭
Remember kids, you don’t have to have a resume like this guy to succeed
For sure lmao. I am probably 0.01% as smart as this guy and I have a pretty decent SWE job in the US. College is hard but it’s not the real world and never will be. You just need to get your hands dirty with internships and experience and projects.
@@The_Lightless who asked
@@jakebrowning2373 Who are you?
@@The_Lightless im happy you replied, learnt something new dont listen to that dude he's jus jealous
@@jakebrowning2373you Trolls go soft saying that irl
lowkey if you ahvent already looked into. theres research on using the structure of the fly brain (drosophila for my bio people) and using that to help with modeling neural networks understadnding better connectivity.
Hey, sry I was just curious what distro this is? Should be Ubuntu right? And if so how did you manage to mod you taskbar so damn clean
sidebar? you mean dash? if so then he just reduce the size of it from settings
also yes this is ubuntu
N😂
de is gnome
currently taking discrete math,,
it's not super hard so far, but i'm scared for the deeper topics..,,
Hope you did well boss
Chill guy. Wish him the best
How are you possible😢
I really love studying i also study for hours but your really killing this thing
I mean come on 9 hours thats some insane discipline
What drives you? What moves you?
How are you possible?😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱
Fear of failure
I remember this course from college, i took this course two times 😭
dude seemed more tired at the beginning than at the end 💀
Omg, I just finished a whole laboratory on statistics, this is perfect :3
im in my last years of high school and never had anything close to this, i wanted to go for a CS degree but after seeing this i think i should reconsider that choice lmao
Me too 😅 wanted a CS degree instead of going into med but seeing this is making me beyond anxious. I was always bad at maths but this bruh
@@moonscore77We all start knowing nothing lol don't let that demotivate you 😂
Degree programs are set up for you to succeed, if you care enough about the material to learn it and use it you will be fine.
@@moonscore77Cs is very math heavy, at least when you’re in uni.
The job market is over saturated right now so it’s very hard to get a job unless you stand out. It’s not a guaranteed type of job unless you work super hard.
As for med it is also painful in the whole studying process, but higher chance of getting a job, almost a guarantee since med field still needs a lot of people.
Just do what you’re passionate about the most, and don’t think about the salary. Bc your life would be miserable if you’re not passionate about these two, bc they requires effort and interest to learn
Its all impressive to see a kid do this stuff then you do your research on him and see he comes from a upper middle/high class upbringing. Dude went to Vermont Academy which is $38k - 70k tuition per year. and then to another high school which is 18k or so per year. Stop comparing yourself to people born with opportunities like this and access to great education and family structure right off the bat. He's literally going for BS in Math/CS as well as Applied/Engineering Physics, this is practically unobtainable for a large majority of people.
This dude also saying the CS market isn't shit at 2:00:00 is kind of hilarious because it is quite literally statistically dogshit, look at the mass post covid layoffs, proceeds to say its shit if you're a bad programmer and good if you have undeniable skills? Like no duh dude, if you're a absolute beast ofc you're still getting a job and if you've always been shit it's even harder, the difference being its harder for the average person to get a job in the industry.
I'm honestly not even hating but the lack of transparency and being slightly out of touch does not help
9:40:45 cancelling nvidia firmware is crazy dawg
was my first math class at uni, pretty simple stuff actually compared to the rest.
i know im definitely late, but good luck bro, i aced mine last sem
thank you so much for this content it is super useful
im very grateful
Godspeed
i lowkey love watching you study lol
Taking discreet math next year. Needless to say, don’t think I’m smart enough lol
Hi I hope you can belive in yourself, all the best.
You don't have to be smart to take discrete math, dw. Most cs majors suck at math and get through it, it's not as hard as they say
@@tmjz7327are you a cs major?
@@00serenity00 yes, I studied math and cs and am now in grad school for math and have also met many cs majors through courses I TAed
bro study in 1 livestream = me study in 1 week 💀
I'm subscribing and liking just for the sheer effort of this guy posting this demon of a video.😂 I barely passed college algebra. 😂
you’re amazing
randomly reccommended, hope you did well fam
I attend georgia tech and i gotta admit u guys at umd are actully insane when it comes to CS. I teamed up with a dude from umd for hackgt , and met a lot of other CS folks from there and everyone was cracked. And then i stumble across this vid, good stuff
45:21 your answer was almost the optimal. State 3 and 8 are the exact same so if you were to combine them you would have had it under 9 states
ok smarty pants
@@floomickIt's okay dumby pants (joke)
Bro i cant wrap my head with 9 hours of this
Just one more video before bed
Yo do you have a playlist with more songs like the ones in the video?
How tf do you ever retain anything studying for 10 hours
Its crazy how i just started discrete in second year and its already in my feed 😭
This is getting recommended to me 3 months later 😂
Omg I remember this course material this shit literally had me going insane. It was a miracle I was able to pass the class with an ok grade
For no reason, this pops up on my YT feed at almost 2 a.m….okay
All I can think of is that for some people studying for 9 hours straight is just a uni experience and not highschool and uni
Bro is division 1 ice hockey player and a math genius what the hell
bro mogs us to oblivion
how did u do
Could you show us your dots? What Linux distro do you use?
i am pretty sure it is ubuntu
How does someone feel happiness being like this guy that studies 24/7 in this video ?
by finding a high paying job.
I think its because they inherently want to do what they do. Intrinsic goal so it comes within and him working and learning towards that goals prob gives him positive feedback loops to continue on like hes sort of content in a way i assume.
I genuinely enjoy mathemathics, so its easier to put such a large amount of time into it for me but 9 hrs in a sitting is still crazy imo and not even good for retaining info.
@@ramiensharifi6591 whats ur sweet spot for studying? Also Id like to agree with your retention point but its hard to tell how his brain works and if it actually works for him rather than a structure of time blocks throughout the day.
@@luigi-zx9nf I hate studying yet I pull off crazy sessions motivated by the sunk cost fallacy.
Clocking in for an almost 10 hour shift of studying is crazy work.
To the person in chat that said A levels are the same difficulty of SAT exams. You have obviously never taken an A level Exam.
If you had taken an A level exam, I will assume that you failed.
EDIT: just read that you are 16 but regardless my point stands
I took both in 2021 and I think an ape with less hair than a seagull could pass an SAT exam blindfolded.
I dont mean to be rude its just rude to discredit all the A level students that worked so hard for their results.
- yes SAT students worked hard too, but you did not do as much as the a level student I dont care. Its the truth.
Yes there are less subjects in A levels but the depth that the courses go into are much deeper.
dont believe me? Tell me what a Boson Quartet is. oh you dont know? Well I learned that in 2019 in Physics A-Level.
Put quite simply, American education needs to change.
- Dom Germany 22
Nice stream tho
This is awesome - ur goated g
I studied from 4pm to 5am before my exam :).
did you die on your bed after that exam?
Imagine understanding this, an incredible advantage.
2:50:50 BRO LOL I wonk for a company called Ceramic Pro LLC. They call all of their apparel and merchandise CP. I never thought of that but now it makes things weird wtf
BTW How are you doing now with your life and career? I am sure Ceramic Pro would love to meet!
literally putting this on when im studying tmr morning