Posts Tagged ‘science’

4-H offers science, technology, engineering and math programming
A work force strong in science, technology, engineering and math is essential for Colorado to compete in the national global economy.


Lecture 8: Complexity; log, linear, quadratic, exponential algorithms Instructors: Prof. Eric Grimson, Prof. John Guttag View the complete course at: ocw.mit.edu License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at ocw.mit.edu More courses at ocw.mit.edu


Lecture 4: Decomposition and abstraction through functions; introduction to recursion Instructors: Prof. Eric Grimson, Prof. John Guttag View the complete course at: ocw.mit.edu License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at ocw.mit.edu More courses at ocw.mit.edu

4-H Science: Hands-on. Revolutionary [USA Science and Engineering Festival: The Blog]
As the state’s largest youth development organization – with a network of more than 6 million young public – 4-H prepares youth to go our world forward. Through out-of-school programming, in-school enrichment programs and camps, 4-H cultivates the next generation of leaders, strengthening our state’s ability to tackle chief challenges such as global competitiveness, world hunger, civic …

A science section for the Huffington Post? More like a pseudoscience section! (2010 edition) [Respectful Insolence]
Amusing how everything ancient is new again, isn’t it? Yes, if there’s one thing I’ve learned over nearly six years of blogging, it’s that, sooner or later, everything is recycled, and I do mean everything . At least, that was the thought going through my mind when I came across PZ’s discussion of a clueless wonder who appears to be advocating a science section in that cesspit of anti-vaccine quackery …

In college I want to go into computer programming. For a minor though I’m going into a science most likely physics, genetics, or chemistry. Whats the best programming language to write programs for these subjects?

Or computer software engineering. I know there are differences in them, just not sure. I want to be able to program video games using the c++ programming language, but if I hear if I were to get a degree in game and simulation programming, I wouldn’t be fit for jobs that need a computer science degree.
If I were to get a degree in computer science, would I still have the information to make games? Or vice versa.

Thanks.

Im going to college soon and i like computer i just want to know if computer science includles web design and interactive meadia?

From what I hear, most CS majors started programming while they were very young. This is kind of discouraging to someone who wants to start programming or is interested in the field. What are your thoughts on this?