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/sci/ - Science & Math

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>> No.4418616 [View]
File: 75 KB, 645x626, 1327423246409.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4418616

I need some help /sci/

It's about atheism.

A little background on me. I've been a atheist for well over 10 years. I'm a big fan of Carl Sagan,Richard Dawkins,Christopher Hitchens and so on.

The problem is this video, well videos on this topic.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0DT6uljSbg&feature=endscreen

I think my head exploded.

I've watched a few physics videos trying to explain how matter came into existence and I just didn't get it.

this is probably a bad example but to me if matter
just pops into being from no where it should still be doing it right?

>> No.4338583 [View]
File: 75 KB, 645x626, 1327423246409.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4338583

>>4338569 I bet you have a lot of fiends

>>4338570
if they don't use physical tools how do they make things like "a working car" it was a car shaped thing with paddle wheels that moved about 20 or 30 parts

>> No.4287342 [View]
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4287342

You probably know much more about this than /adv/.
Gonna start the university (a polytechnic actually). I am really interested in robotics, both from an hardware and software point of view. I can get into it both from Computer Science and from Microengineering ( which is actually the bachelor degree, consider it like micromechatronics and then specialize in robotics at the master level).

Going through Computer Science will give me a strong background of computation and programming skill but almost nothing (besides maybe labs) on the "hardware side".

Microengineering (as I said, regardless the name it is actually mechatronics) will give me the opportunity to do things in a more balanced way, you get both mechanics, electronics and computer science but what I would like to know is if with a bachelor degree in this microengineering and a master degree in robotics I can actually be able to be hired for AI, machine learning (so mostly the software side).

In other words, mechatronics gives you the chance to know a wider range of stuff so one could think that it also allows to find in a easier way a job because you are more elastic, my question is: is that really true? I mean, if as a mechatronic I decide to focus on software do I really have a chance against an hypothetical dude that from the beginning decided computer science and did it along both bachelor and master?
This elasticity is really appreciated or it is just sort of a myth?

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