Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | maastaar's commentslogin

You can use Google Scholar for searching if you have specific topic in your mind. Under each paper in the search results you can find two links, they are "Cited by ..." and "Related articles", you can find more papers about the topic by using these two links. The link of Google Scholar is https://scholar.google.com/

SemanticScholar is also good: https://www.semanticscholar.org/


What if I just want to learn about random shit? The main reason I read him is to learn about new things and things that might be big in 5 years.


Thanks a lot for your suggestions. Your notes will be considered.

>> I have no idea of what you're looking for for proof of concept, or is this just a "take this paper and do what you want with it, I thought these papers were interesting."

Yes, it is "take this paper and do what you want with it, I thought these papers were interesting." :-)


That's an interesting idea, can you please share it in "ideas" section in ResearchCoders on the same page of the research.


Thanks for sharing, really useful tool.


I appreciate your participation, will consider your notes. Thanks a lot.


I think you can make your manifesto page 'more like a manifesto' by starting it with a sentence something like

"Our goal in ResearchCoders is to draw the attention of programmers to research that has not yet been realised and urge those programmers to implement practical systems that realize the ideas of that research".

This is based on one of the existing sentences.

Actually the wikipedia definition [0] of 'manifesto' is fairly loose: "A manifesto is a published declaration of the intentions, motives, or views of the issuer, be it an individual, group, political party or government". By that definition, you have a manifesto.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manifesto


Thanks a lot. Sure, more papers will be added in the future.


Maastar - slightly adjacent idea. Research papers sometimes involve data through which the hypothesis is made, getting access to this data can help understand hypothesis better. It can also fuel other ideas for people. Would be great to also have workspace where people can engage in active data-sleuthing through these shared spaces and workbenches.


Thanks for your suggestion. May you give me an example of such kind of papers.


In Google Scholar you can find a link to the PDF file in the right side of the research title.


It may be better to link directly through to the download in that case


That's nice. Thanks for sharing.


Definitely.

Can we find some similar tutorials that show other applications of linear algebra?


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: