Is it possible to learn web programming in a year without any previous experience and be able to build complex website? I mean not just simple home pages but sites with many functions like Facebook (Offcourse I don't mean the Facebook so big like it is today, but like it was when Zuck first...
Yeah but never mind computers, I mean even some other super-computer could do that kind of theorem solving that micro mass was talking about:
"What a computer might possibly do is to randomly come up with theorems. So you start with axioms, and you apply the logical rules on that to come up...
Well then, will that kind of theorem finding make mathematicians obsolete? Because although you say that not anytime soon, but if somebody would make quantum computer the computing capacity would be unimaginable.
I mean if we someday has quantum computers etc. wouldn't it be able to solve all math problems just by heave number crunching and doing so, wouldn't that meant that every mathematician would be out of job? So is math really bad career for future?
Has anyone any experience with that? Do you recommend it? I am undergraduate physics major and I am wondering should I buy iPad for this purpose (Ofc I would do other things with it too :D).
What I meant was a career that at least somehow involves skills that physicist have. So my question was basicly how hard is it to break into quantitative finance with physics degree.
How hard is it actually to break into finance after theoretical physics phd? I am still undergrad and I'm hoping to get into academia after phd (and postdocs off course), but I know that there is huge competition for faculty openings and I am sometimes pretty worried that I won't find any job...
Did you take it (or are you taking it) in college and if so, then how much? And would are you thoughts about paying it back with small grad school/post doc etc salaries?
Lenght of bachelors degree is 3 years in many countries in Europe like in UK, but in US usually 4 years. So does european bs qualify for applying to US grad schools or is masters degree required for europeans with 3-years degree?
Tuition? I was under impression that everyone in US grad school would get somekind of salary, was I wrong? Or is it really possible that instead of them paying to you, you could end up paying to them?