Difference between revisions of "User:GMak64"

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[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4175442/First-commercial-fusion-reactor-built-2025.html Could we have LIMITLESS energy in 13 years? Doughnut-shaped device to 'put fusion power into the grid' by 2030], SHIVALI BEST FOR MAILONLINE, Daily Mail, updated 1 February 2017, accessed 5 February 2017 (Grand Challenge)
 
[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-4175442/First-commercial-fusion-reactor-built-2025.html Could we have LIMITLESS energy in 13 years? Doughnut-shaped device to 'put fusion power into the grid' by 2030], SHIVALI BEST FOR MAILONLINE, Daily Mail, updated 1 February 2017, accessed 5 February 2017 (Grand Challenge)
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The Travelling Salesman problem interested me the most. I know how hard this is in a programming language like Python or Java, and it would require a tons of imports, memory, and code. MATLAB however, does not need any of that. The code seems a lot simpler on MATLAB than it would be on any other language, and it also seems to run quicker and more efficiently.

Latest revision as of 20:33, 5 February 2017

Grant Mak

Studies at Duke University

Member of the Duke University Marching Band

Lover of Basketball

Yankees and Giants fan

Chi Psi pledge

Check out this cool article!

Could we have LIMITLESS energy in 13 years? Doughnut-shaped device to 'put fusion power into the grid' by 2030, SHIVALI BEST FOR MAILONLINE, Daily Mail, updated 1 February 2017, accessed 5 February 2017 (Grand Challenge)


The Travelling Salesman problem interested me the most. I know how hard this is in a programming language like Python or Java, and it would require a tons of imports, memory, and code. MATLAB however, does not need any of that. The code seems a lot simpler on MATLAB than it would be on any other language, and it also seems to run quicker and more efficiently.