Debugging Epohul
I'm thrilled to announce that I have become a skilled electrician (It still doesn't work...my dad told me to buy tools tomorrow)
the new purchases
(the tall one was bought as a weapon)
(the tall one was bought as a weapon)
😁19
Debugging Epohul
This is the best technical book I've read that I really liked how the book is designed(content wise too it's really good) (I would like to find more book design inspirations)
I tried to recreate one of the pages from the book using Adobe indesign in 20 minutes....
the first one is the original if you can't tell hehe
the first one is the original if you can't tell hehe
🔥15❤1👏1
Epohul's chat
It would also be amazing if you could share some advice for fresh uni students.
this message has triggered a 15 minute of yapping infront of the camera
❤13👀2🔥1
whenever I watch a movie that isn't a sitcom or my comfort movie
(freab introduced me to the site letterboxd.com a while ago and I'm proud to say I have logged 3 movies so far)
(freab introduced me to the site letterboxd.com a while ago and I'm proud to say I have logged 3 movies so far)
😁12❤1
I tried recreating this (mine is on the right)
Also learned a bunch about Bauhaus Art movement from a documentary I found on youtube
Also learned a bunch about Bauhaus Art movement from a documentary I found on youtube
🔥20❤5
A comprehensive resource list to get started or advance in quantum computing
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7374076049229299712?updateEntityUrn=urn%3Ali%3Afs_updateV2%3A%28urn%3Ali%3Aactivity%3A7374076049229299712%2CFEED_DETAIL%2CEMPTY%2CDEFAULT%2Cfalse%29
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7374076049229299712?updateEntityUrn=urn%3Ali%3Afs_updateV2%3A%28urn%3Ali%3Aactivity%3A7374076049229299712%2CFEED_DETAIL%2CEMPTY%2CDEFAULT%2Cfalse%29
Linkedin
#quantumcomputing #qml #stemeducation #quantumcourses #deeptech #linkedinlearning #tech #youtube | Kiran Kaur Raina | 48 comments
YouTube can teach you Quantum Computing, but only if you watch the right courses. Here’s my curated list of the best ones:
1)Classiq:
https://lnkd.in/g9QK2f6U
https://lnkd.in/grPZft9R
2)Qiskit:
https://lnkd.in/gEsdK-9H
https://lnkd.in/gpTvuCBh
https://…
1)Classiq:
https://lnkd.in/g9QK2f6U
https://lnkd.in/grPZft9R
2)Qiskit:
https://lnkd.in/gEsdK-9H
https://lnkd.in/gpTvuCBh
https://…
🔥9
my two cents on qc so far
anyone can get started tbh, but here’s what I’ve realized after 3–4 years in it. becoming a researcher is just one path. the space isn’t only made of researchers. it’s full of people from different backgrounds: software engineering, hardware engineering, biology, chemical engineering, mathematics, and probably many more I haven’t even met yet.
you can carve your own path and make it work.
the one thing I wish I knew earlier is this: master your core skill first, then bring it into the qc context. for me, I’ve always loved building tools and software projects. but because I was so desperate to get into the qc space, I jumped in headfirst and spent most of my time chasing frameworks and algorithms. sure, I can use them for problems at hand, but I didn’t deepen my foundation in software engineering. now I’ve found my path (I think :) ). even within software engineering, there’s so much to explore like mastering cryptography, working on compilers, or coming up with new algorithms and applications.yeah so explore, experiment and when you find something of your interest dive in.
if you’re just starting out, experiment a lot, but don’t neglect building a strong core skill. whether it’s software, hardware, math, whatever. get your base right, and then apply it in quantum.
#2cents
anyone can get started tbh, but here’s what I’ve realized after 3–4 years in it. becoming a researcher is just one path. the space isn’t only made of researchers. it’s full of people from different backgrounds: software engineering, hardware engineering, biology, chemical engineering, mathematics, and probably many more I haven’t even met yet.
you can carve your own path and make it work.
the one thing I wish I knew earlier is this: master your core skill first, then bring it into the qc context. for me, I’ve always loved building tools and software projects. but because I was so desperate to get into the qc space, I jumped in headfirst and spent most of my time chasing frameworks and algorithms. sure, I can use them for problems at hand, but I didn’t deepen my foundation in software engineering. now I’ve found my path (I think :) ). even within software engineering, there’s so much to explore like mastering cryptography, working on compilers, or coming up with new algorithms and applications.yeah so explore, experiment and when you find something of your interest dive in.
if you’re just starting out, experiment a lot, but don’t neglect building a strong core skill. whether it’s software, hardware, math, whatever. get your base right, and then apply it in quantum.
#2cents
⚡22❤8