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navinsylvester | 5 years ago
> But there is a trick you could use if you're not a programmer: visit a top computer science department and see what they use in research projects
Please don't shoot yourself with this suggestion. From my personal experience Academia is so distant from what is relevant or practical to the industry.
beager|5 years ago
juped|5 years ago
speedgoose|5 years ago
SeanLuke|5 years ago
The big difference between the US and Europe, however, is that universities in the US depend on grants to fund PhD students. Many (most?) European countries have national funding programs for their PhDs, which frees up both the students and their advisors to work on whatever fancies them regardless of practicality. France is particularly notorious for this. US academics do not have this luxury.
In my field, by far the lion's share of impractical (Fun! I love it! But impractical) work comes from Europe.
xiaolingxiao|5 years ago
netjiro|5 years ago
Personally I've worked on a half dozen global research network projects bringing together both public and private funding and 10-15 organisations, mixed universities, research institutes, and small to behemoth companies.
The target is always some wide ranging new radical technology platform and they spawn a bunch of startups and spin off projects.
Some targets can turn out to be too difficult, or simply wrong, but I've never seen a project that hasn't lead to at least one startup / product / new technology.
jorblumesea|5 years ago