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[2671.48 --> 2671.84] Very cool. |
[2672.34 --> 2675.18] I'd love to see that in action, like in practical use. |
[2675.52 --> 2677.20] The way you explain it, it sounds great. |
[2677.54 --> 2679.68] I'm like, yeah, that sounds like something I'd be up for. |
[2679.98 --> 2680.36] There you go. |
[2680.54 --> 2680.66] Yeah. |
[2680.96 --> 2681.16] Yeah. |
[2681.16 --> 2685.16] Perhaps we need sort of a blog post from you when you're done with school or something. |
[2685.94 --> 2686.34] Yeah. |
[2686.34 --> 2686.74] Yeah. |
[2687.94 --> 2690.56] So if you remember me asking, what did you go back to school for? |
[2690.96 --> 2693.22] Well, I went back to school for computer science. |
[2693.44 --> 2697.56] I got an undergraduate computer science degree in 2008. |
[2698.16 --> 2701.24] You know, I'm not that old, but I feel older than I am, I guess. |
[2701.52 --> 2705.26] You can do the math at home, see and figure out how old I'm likely to be. |
[2705.94 --> 2710.98] And so then I've been in industry ever since, focused on industry things, right? |
[2710.98 --> 2713.06] And they all tend to be very practical. |
[2713.76 --> 2717.06] They all tend to be, you know, single goal oriented. |
[2717.98 --> 2724.02] And all of the learning that I've done has been very focused on a goal rather than broader. |
[2724.28 --> 2731.04] So I went back to get a master's to get that breadth again, because I've kind of missed that. |
[2731.64 --> 2737.18] Right now, I kept using the SQL and the database examples, because right now I'm taking a course in databases. |
[2737.18 --> 2741.28] So that's an easy extension there. |
[2741.96 --> 2750.86] But the thing that I'm planning to specialize in now is formal methods, because I love this stuff, like programming language theory and things like that. |
[2751.12 --> 2753.16] I really do enjoy it a lot. |
[2753.96 --> 2760.20] And the formal method specialization happens to have quite a bit of language theory stuff in it. |
[2760.48 --> 2762.06] So look forward to that. |
[2762.06 --> 2765.20] Yeah, it sounds like you're in your bread and butter kind of space right now. |
[2765.38 --> 2767.32] That's nice, nice, nice. |
[2767.58 --> 2767.74] Yeah. |
[2767.98 --> 2768.20] Yeah. |
[2768.30 --> 2776.18] And now that you mention it, interestingly enough, I think we tend to go to school to get a specialization, to narrow it down on a very particular set of skills. |
[2776.66 --> 2781.90] Even though when we go in, we might not know that's what we're doing, but we're going to learn how to do X, right? |
[2781.90 --> 2784.78] And then we come out and we get a job to do X, right? |
[2784.78 --> 2789.20] It's very rarely do you go back just for the sake of breath, right? |
[2789.26 --> 2793.16] Just to get, basically to go find out what you don't know about, right? |
[2793.24 --> 2799.02] And then you sort of see how you can sort of apply it to your already existing set of knowledge that you require in the industry. |
[2799.36 --> 2800.30] So yeah, I commend you for that. |
[2800.44 --> 2801.28] That's very cool. |
[2801.56 --> 2806.44] Well, I'm very, very lucky and privileged to be able to do that at this point, right? |
[2806.44 --> 2815.28] Because I think probably all of us remember in undergrad, we probably just went so we could get to whatever our next step was. |
[2815.70 --> 2817.46] Most of us probably was a job, right? |
[2817.58 --> 2820.96] Maybe some of us was grad school, but most of us was a job. |
[2821.04 --> 2822.56] It certainly was me, right? |
[2822.56 --> 2826.72] I was laser focused on getting done so I could get paid. |
[2827.98 --> 2829.66] But these days it's different, right? |
[2829.66 --> 2836.32] I have a job and, you know, I'm able to continue working in this job while I do this part-time program. |
[2837.06 --> 2849.36] And so I fully acknowledge and I try to remind myself daily that I'm very lucky to be able to do something like this just because I want to rather than having to do something. |
[2849.66 --> 2850.02] Pretty cool. |
[2850.16 --> 2850.46] Pretty cool. |
[2850.96 --> 2858.28] Well, Aaron, unless you have another like more like popular opinion for me, although I don't think anything you said here is unpopular, right? |
[2858.28 --> 2862.88] I think maybe it's just the way you talk and put it, but I don't think any of it was unpopular. |
[2863.54 --> 2864.32] Diplomacy, yeah. |
[2864.94 --> 2865.52] Yeah, yeah. |
[2865.52 --> 2867.40] Well, I do have an unpopular opinion. |
[2867.66 --> 2867.92] Okay. |
[2868.24 --> 2869.68] This one will be unpopular. |
[2870.02 --> 2870.52] Okay, wait. |
[2870.64 --> 2872.18] Then I got to play the song if that's the case. |
[2872.44 --> 2873.12] Okay, okay. |
[2873.14 --> 2873.76] Let's do it. |
[2878.14 --> 2878.78] Unpopular opinion. |
[2878.98 --> 2879.96] You want to. |
[2879.96 --> 2881.64] I actually think you should probably leave. |
[2882.14 --> 2886.58] Unpopular opinion. |
[2887.14 --> 2887.22] Unpopular opinion. |
[2887.90 --> 2888.42] Boom. |
[2892.76 --> 2893.46] Lay it on us. |
[2893.46 --> 2894.18] All right. |
[2894.18 --> 2894.20] All right. |
[2894.58 --> 2896.88] Well, I've been doing a bunch of Rust lately. |
[2897.04 --> 2900.96] Some like very low level stuff dealing with virtual machines. |
[2901.82 --> 2917.60] And I believe now that I've used Rust long enough, I believe the type system in Rust is more complete and leads to more concise and easier to write and read programs than Go. |
[2917.60 --> 2918.84] Okay, then. |
[2919.32 --> 2919.62] Yeah. |
[2919.62 --> 2923.46] So the Go type system has some work to do. |
[2923.88 --> 2924.26] Okay. |
[2924.64 --> 2925.06] Okay. |
[2925.32 --> 2925.60] Yeah. |
[2925.98 --> 2930.34] I don't mean to fan the flames of the Go Rust thing, but I'm sure I just have. |
[2930.56 --> 2931.90] Oh, too late, buddy. |
[2931.90 --> 2932.70] I'm just done it. |
[2932.70 --> 2932.74] I'm just done it. |
[2933.78 --> 2934.62] The flame war. |
[2935.58 --> 2938.56] It's been zero days now since the flame wars. |
[2939.96 --> 2941.30] I know, I know. |
[2941.30 --> 2946.56] I talked a lot about type system things today, right? |
[2946.72 --> 2949.70] And it's not that Rust lets you do all those things. |
[2949.88 --> 2950.84] It certainly doesn't. |
[2951.40 --> 2958.96] But the type system in Rust has more features than the type system in Go. |
[2959.40 --> 2963.70] It certainly allows for some programs that take forever to compile and are hard to read. |
[2963.70 --> 2966.14] So that's the pro and con thing here. |
[2966.48 --> 2976.22] But from my experiences so far, it lets you write more expressive code with fewer lines than the Go equivalent. |
[2976.84 --> 2977.14] Okay. |
[2977.68 --> 2979.98] Well, we shall put that to the test. |
[2980.30 --> 2980.56] Yeah. |
[2980.82 --> 2981.68] The audience. |
[2982.20 --> 2986.74] They will tell us whether they agree with you or disagree with you and come find you in the night or something. |
[2987.06 --> 2987.32] Yeah. |
[2987.46 --> 2987.66] Yeah. |
[2987.72 --> 2989.70] You all know my Twitter. |
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