I have found time and time again that this program has prepared me really well for the real world stuff. Knowing the theory behind things is way better than knowing how to code a handful of specific languages. Granted I was never in a more "practical" program, but still. There's only a handful of classes you really need for practical programming. Rodham was boss at teaching that stuff.
Also I did take EE (224? I think?) For funsies. So that probably helped a great deal as well. Your mileage may vary, though. -Peter On Wed, Aug 7, 2013 at 8:09 AM, Lloyd Brown <lloyd_br...@byu.edu> wrote: > Yes. Quinn Snell definitely works with the bioinformatics guys. > Generally speaking, if Mark Clement does it, you can pretty well bet > that Quinn Snell does it too. Those two work together quite > extensively. I don't know the exact division, but when I've asked Quinn > about it, he's basically given the impression that there is (nearly) no > difference in their research areas, etc. > > Lloyd Brown > Systems Administrator > Fulton Supercomputing Lab > Brigham Young University > http://marylou.byu.edu > > On 08/06/2013 07:24 PM, Matt Gardner wrote: > > If you like biology, you might also talk to Mark Clement, who does > > computational biology (does Quinn Snell also work in that area? I'm not > > sure...). > -------------------- > BYU Unix Users Group > http://uug.byu.edu/ > > The opinions expressed in this message are the responsibility of their > author. They are not endorsed by BYU, the BYU CS Department or BYU-UUG. > ___________________________________________________________________ > List Info (unsubscribe here): http://uug.byu.edu/mailman/listinfo/uug-list >
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