Within 10-20 years, nearly every branch of science will be, for all intents and purposes, a branch of computer science. Computational physics, comp chemistry, comp biology, comp medicine... Even comp archeology. Realistic simulations, big data analysis, and ML everywhere
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Exactly. I will call linear algebra a commodity by now. It supports science as a whole, but there is no "interesting" research in the specific area per se.
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Depends on what you mean by linear algebra. Much of representation theory could be reasonably considered a form of linear algebra, and that's a massive area of research Generalize fields with rings, and there's plenty left to study about linear equations
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That's why he's talking about Computer Science, which is about algorithms/data structures and not computing power.
End of conversation
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Neural nets will be the new t-test?
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Do you think that quantum physics is a branch of linear algebra?
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Numerical methods have been a thing since forever Long before the ML/DL/RL cambrian explosion, scientists depended on numerical methods (as opposed to closed-form solutions to "assume-the-cow-is-spherical-in-a-vacuum"-type problems) So yes, CS has already taken over the world
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