Comment on: How do you usually read programming books?
0 20 May 2017 00:43 u/Dixie_Flatline in v/programmingComment on: Alternatives to notepad++
Been trying KATE and geany, but mainly been using gedit.
Comment on: A computer has beaten a human professional for the first time at Go, the ancient board game
You should cross post this to subs like /v/AI or /v/deeplearning.
This is personally huge, and exciting as just a few years ago I went on a go/baduk in current research kick. Edit: spelling.
Prefer hard copies. Will survive decades without any tinkering.
Or at any rate, a .pdf on a second monitor.
Bring able to make notes, flip quickly to different sections, grab another book, I need the shit separated more than just windows on a single screen.