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#45 | |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
29×3×7 Posts |
Quote:
My experiences of conferences in Europe, North America and Australia is slightly different from your Belgian experience, and each were slightly different from each other. It has been usual to make ones own way from the airport, station, etc, but not inevitable. On several occasions transport has been provided to and from the conference venue. Board and lodging has never been free for me. Sometimes it has been included as part of the conference fee, but that's not the same as free. Sometimes sponsors subsidise the cost, especially for grad students and the like who have difficulty raising money themselves. Coffee and other such refreshments is usually free (i.e. provided by sponsors or paid for from the conference fee). At only one, and that in California, was it not the case. Sometimes, but certainly not always, lunch is included. Perhaps half the time it was. Most conferences I have attended have provided internet-connected machines. At a couple of the conferences I helped set up the network! It is unusual, in my experience, not to have internet connections available somewhere, either directly as part of the conference or by arrangement with the computing services of the host university. I have never needed to Xerox material at a conference myself, so can't express a personal opinion on that facility. Paul Last fiddled with by xilman on 2004-12-16 at 16:45 |
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#46 |
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Aug 2002
Termonfeckin, IE
22×691 Posts |
I am a computer scientist so my experiences with conferences are in that field. I can certainly vouch for a difference between the conference going experience in the US vs. in Europe - particularly continental Europe. However, often one's conference experience is also a function of how large the conference is. I was in Bertinoro, italy in June this year for a workshop of 40 people and we were all treated like kings and queens. It is impossible to do that for a conference with 500 attendees.
That having been said, it is my experience that conferences in Europe do tend to take greater care of attendees than conferences in the United States. I haven't been to a conference in India but my guess is that the experience there will be similar to that of a smallish conference in Europe. And I think that Indians do generally tend to be very hospitable, particularly towards foreign guests. |
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#47 |
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Feb 2017
Nowhere
4,643 Posts |
The sort of thing I have in mind is illustrated by the following:
I know, Cramer's rule can be implemented in a computationally sane manner. But a naive application, iterating "expansion by minors" down to 1x1, is hopeless for n of any size. Yet Cramer's rule has two obvious theoretical applications: one is in proving that an nxn matrix A with integer entries has an inverse with integer entries if, and only if det(A) is +1 or -1. The "only if" part is clear: if A and A-1 both have integer entries, their determinants are integers with product 1. If you assume det(A) is 1 or -1, then the "adjugate formula" for the inverse shows that A-1 also has integer entries, proving the "if" part. (If the entries are in a commutative ring R, the result goes through if det(A) is a unit in R.) Similarly, the formula shows that, if you have an (n-1) x n matrix, and you "fill in" the n-th row with its own cofactors, you get a matrix whose n-th row is orthogonal to each of the first n-1 rows, and whose determinant is the dot product of the n-th row with itself. In the 2x3 case, the "filled in" third row is the "cross product" of the first two rows. So -- are there any other results out there that might qualify as theoretically interesting, but computationally useless? |
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#48 |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
29×3×7 Posts |
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