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7:23 AM
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні Not sure if you heard about it, but VIM doesn't have just a linear editing history, but actually makes a whole tree. That is if you undo something and then change something else, you basically get a separate branch.
 
 
1 hour later…
8:23 AM
@flawr that sounds reasonable
 
8:48 AM
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні yes :( Its "only" 2000£/year loss, but I live in a cheaper city and its also Cmabridge.
@CrisLuengo I see I see, makes sense
albeit nowadays there are so many tourist when students are not around that I am not sure it makes a difference
@LuisMendo Liking memes about not understading linear algebra in Linkedin! The audacity!
 
@AnderBiguri well screw that
@AnderBiguri he's laughing at, not with ;)
 
I agree, they simply can not pay me more in this job position, as its public salaries etc. I don't earn badly anyway, plus if I really want the moneyz, just being here few months will stamp my CV with an (arguably bullshit) "he is a Cambridge researcher".
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні (I know I know hehe, just mocking)
 
 
1 hour later…
10:17 AM
@AnderBiguri :-D
 
 
4 hours later…
2:03 PM
@AnderBiguri also think about the costs of the mouse clicks! If you'd use vim you could save all that money!
 
2:47 PM
@AnderBiguri After adding the CERN, UCL and Cambridge names to your CV, the big money will soon start pouring in, no?
 
3:19 PM
@CrisLuengo T.T will it? pls want food
 
@AnderBiguri No matter how much money I make, free lunch is still the #1 way to get me to show up.
 
hahahah absolutely
 
I guess it's something ingrained to anyone that has been a student? :)
 
admitedly, I kinda like the more relaxed research enviroment of academia, but at some point I need to stop moving around and think about having a fixed job somewhere
user image
3
not sure we ever recover
 
@AnderBiguri That's right on the money.
@AnderBiguri Have you applied to faculty positions? The process sucks, and there's sooo much competition (the opposite of relaxed!), I found industry to be a lot simpler.
 
3:31 PM
@CrisLuengo I admitedly havent because I am not sure what I want to do hehe
 
Oh, and then once you get that faculty position, you become a beggar, a mentor, an administrator and a teacher, and won't have time for actual research.
 
but there have not been faculty positions open in my field in any case
 
(beggar == grant application writer)
 
yeah, I heard that, but at the same point, all the industry positions ive seen have all teh bullshit of "DRIVEN" "HARD WORKNING" "REVOLUTIONIZE THE INDSUTRY"
 
@AnderBiguri that is surprising...
 
3:32 PM
dunno, man, I at the same time, I take my days quite calmly in research, I am not busting my ass all day
and I kinda dont want to go to industry to have tight deadlines etc
 
@AnderBiguri Ouch. "Willing to work 80 hours a week."
 
Does a week even have that many hours?
 
yeah, definetly not in the mood for that
 
Hey, if you like what you do, I'm sure you can keep doing it for ever. There's just some added stress if every job is temporary.
But you're not going to find a more relaxed or research-focused position anywhere.
 
I even considered moving to industry and get some job as a code monkey, to have less pressure on me. In some ways, the advantage of academia right now though is that I know so well my field that I need to make very little effort comparing to other things
@CrisLuengo yes I know I know. I am a bit lost on future plans to be honest
for now im just rolling with it. I don't have any "life goal" that I am trying to achieve either, so it snot like I need to buy a house, raise a family or anything in particular
 
3:37 PM
I miss that, having no responsibilities.
 
to be fair, work-wise, I am a tiny bit tired of doing all the work all the time, I think I'd enjoy being a research manager, where the code-writing, results-plotting is done by someone else. Maybe I've just done it too intensely in the past yearas, burned out all my code-energy XD
 
Yeah, you need to take CHATLAB breaks in between coding sessions!
 
hahaha
I do take code breaks between my CHATLAB sessions
 
Looks like you do it the right way around!
 
4:00 PM
bTW @CrisLuengo, few weeks ago I asked about depth-changing filters on images, with rotation too
you showed me a function in DIPLib that does the job
I may need to use something like that, but I may need to code it myself. You have an easy ref to see what would be the best way to implement that? Or maybe just your code is a good ref, have not checked
just trying to do the skip-the-research-and-ask-an-expert, so if its not an easy asnwer I'll do the research
 
If you find something I'd love to read about it too, but I can't help you otherwise.
(I could just do ask-an-amateur-and-do-the-research-anway.)
 
4:45 PM
@AnderBiguri could you remind me of that conversation? What meaning of “depth” are we talking about? What function did I show you?
 
sorry, depth is my technical term
 
My memory is not what it used to be!
 
I want a filter (e.g. Gaussian 1D) over an image. This filter needs to chagne with respect to e.g. row index. But I also want this to be done in some arbitrary trayectory
arbitrary rotation*
so, if you imagine a parallel beam CT (if this is something you know about), I want the fitler to have different e.g. std for different "depth", or distance from the source
am I making sense or should I bring diagrams?
 
Oh, yes, now I remember!
The DIPlib code for that is... complex. Probably unnecessarily so.
You just need to write a loop over your pixels, and at each pixel form the appropriate kernel, and apply the dot product with the pixel's neighborhood. There is no trick to it.
 
that was my impression yes, and I may need it to code it myself, so I was wondering if you have some reference on how to do this. Because Ican only think of bruteforcing several filters with image interpolations per rotations
 
4:50 PM
To speed up processing, add padding to the image.
No need to interpolate. The kernel is a rotated Gaussian, just generate a rotated Gaussian.
 
right, that makes sense yes
 
You can build a table with values for the Gaussian, and read from the table (with or without interpolation depending on need) to speed up creating the kernel.
 
but I can't fft this, right? because if I do, I'd need to basically fft per differet kernel
 
But with a different kernel at every pixel you cannot do anything more clever than this. This is also the reason bilateral filters are slow.
Yeah, no FFT, no separable implementation, nothing. Just brute force.
The DIPlib implementation does that too.
 
right. As its technically not a different filter per kernel, but per parallel line in the image space, maybe many ffts are faster, depedning on how "thick" these bands of same kernel are
fair, that was actually indeed the question, if there was some computational trick, or just the good ol' 4 for loops
 
4:53 PM
Yeah, if you apply the same kernel to a whole row of pixels, you can speed it up. If the line is not parallel to a grid axis, you probably can't.
 
well, you can approxiimate it in 2D and then mask the result, but again, it may be slower anyway
 
If the Gaussian is axis-aligned, and the line along which you apply it is axis-aligned, you can use the separability to speed up processing. If the Gaussian is rotated (not separable) you might be able to speed it up using FFT.
 
yeah makes sense. Feels liek this would be driven by the speed required by the application. If its good enough with the loopy loops, i'll stay like that
 
Masking the result might be useful if you have a limited set of different Gaussians. If you have to many of them, it's probably not worth the effort. But it's hard to know what will be most efficient without implementing all the options and comparing them. And that is probably too much effort anyway. I would stick to the brute-force approach.
 
this is for SPECT, where you may model theh detector response like that. But images are often 128^2, so not too big
 
4:57 PM
Tiny!
 
yeah, its the inherent resolution of the physics, not much you can do about it
these functional modalities create the best images to be fair
 
@AnderBiguri wow that looks great!
 
@AnderBiguri Fantastic!
 
its from wikipedia eh
just in case
 
What's so great about tomography is that you can show the raw data collected and not even do a reconstruction. People wouldn't know the difference! :)
 
5:08 PM
that is a recosntruction though!
its just displayed via maximum intensity projections (i.e. max(value*line) rather than sum(line*value))
 
@AnderBiguri slightly disappointing, but still very cool:)
 
@AnderBiguri As I said, you can't tell the difference! :D
 
Though, indeed, max projection leads to a better visualization than sum (==raw data).
 
 
6 hours later…
11:03 PM
@AnderBiguri that's a solid place to be at, my man
@AnderBiguri get a phd student, they'll do all the work and plot the results, you just have to exploit them right up to the point that they almost break
 

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