Talks at Google
Renowned computer scientist David Patterson came to Mountain View to provide advice that, as he puts it, “I wish I had been given at the start of my career.”
An entertaining and engaging presenter, Prof. Patterson takes us through a number of tongue-in-cheek examples of how to sink a career in academics and elsewhere. He also provides great tips on how how to steer clear of these mistakes and build a career that is both successful and satisfying.
David Patterson wrote the book Computer Architecture: A Quantitative Approach with John Hennessy and helped lead UC Berkeley research projects Reduced Instruction Set Computers (RISC), Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks (RAID), and Network of Workstations (NOW). He was elected to the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Sciences, the Silicon Valley Engineering Hall of Fame, both AAAS organizations, and President of ACM.
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hard to understand….its like negate what speaker is saying in bullet points -> how to have bad talk?
Most of the textbooks I had to use in my Computer Science studies seemed to follow the "don't explain anything" principle.
I thought this was about thatdudeinblue appearently not
TnT
Link to Hamming's video greatly appreciated
I like the content, but his presentation is lacking.
the thing about communication and interaction reminds me if why so many swedish companies did so well: fika (or fikapaus). (google it).