My parents never compared me to a smart kid . They said Gene’s always skip one generation so I have no excuse if I am bad at math because my grandfather was a math professor.
@John Doe It depends on what you’re doing in IT. If you’re programming you need to know a wide array of different mathematical concepts based on what you’re doing. For instance, if you want to develop a 3d renderer/rasterizer you need to know a bunch of vector and matrix math. If you’re working as an IT support tech or something, then probably not so much.
I love this guy so much I learnt so many things from him on MIT opencourseware he is a very good teacher he carried me through the time I do competitive programming in high school yeah basically a very awesome guy
People who watched his DP lectures from MIT, definitely knows his history because they way he taught it, it felt really different from everyother lectures I have ever seen.
So actually I have a friend who did something very similar together. He graduated high school at 13, got his bachelors at 15, and is currently working on his masters i believe. We used to also be in a bowling league together 🙂
Dr Erik at 14: getting his bachelors degree
Me at 14: still learning my timestables
Bro I’m 12 and I’m a junior
Its vegetable
Put in the work put in the hours
It’s ShitStable
Me at 28: still using my fingers to add
My parents never compared me to a smart kid . They said Gene’s always skip one generation so I have no excuse if I am bad at math because my grandfather was a math professor.
Math is my weakest subject
@Stormy yh. They teach too much useless bs
@John Doe math is useless to you if you become a McDonald’s employee
@Smeggers explain how i am gonna use the pythagorean theorem in the IT field then, if i would go into the IT field
They got their genes from the same grandparents
@John Doe It depends on what you’re doing in IT. If you’re programming you need to know a wide array of different mathematical concepts based on what you’re doing. For instance, if you want to develop a 3d renderer/rasterizer you need to know a bunch of vector and matrix math. If you’re working as an IT support tech or something, then probably not so much.
He’s a genius professor. Absolutely love the way he teaches.
So you’re MIT?
@The Glaze taught
@Faitfore yes,
I’m not good at grammar 😑
So? What!?
Not being rude😊
🙄
@The Glaze grammar is very important
I love this guy so much I learnt so many things from him on MIT opencourseware he is a very good teacher he carried me through the time I do competitive programming in high school yeah basically a very awesome guy
animuwu
Gohar: records his hands above a wooden table
J perm: also records his hands above a wooden table
Gohar and j perm have a very similar voice.
And they are clearly both into rubik’s cubing:
J perm has a channel all about rubik’s cubing
And gohar had two 3x3s in a previous video and now he has a 7×7
Conclusion: they are the same person
And for those who don’t know who j perm is, look it up on youtube, he makes videos about rubik’s cubes etc.
Gohar’s profile pic doesn’t match with j perm’s face
Everyone: **talks about Erik**
Me: “god I’m lucky I don’t have a rubix cube like his at the beginning of the video cause I’d cry trying to solve it”
i mean its a 7×7 so its around the same difficult as a 4×4. isnt really that hard just suuupper time consuming
@Angelo Dimetrius no trust me it’s harder than a 4×4
@_Zombie_08 nah its not harder i was a cuber and angelo is right i mean its just more time spent pairing
People who watched his DP lectures from MIT, definitely knows his history because they way he taught it, it felt really different from everyother lectures I have ever seen.
He’s the real life Sheldon tbh, this is the first time I’ve heard of him but he’s done so many things in such a young age. Brilliant, really.
So actually I have a friend who did something very similar together. He graduated high school at 13, got his bachelors at 15, and is currently working on his masters i believe. We used to also be in a bowling league together 🙂
I had a classmate that when we were 12, he legit got accepted to college. The surprising thing is that he was failing all the classes.