[PUBLISHER] upload files #154

* PUSH NOTE : You and Your Research, Richard Hamming.md

* PUSH NOTE : 18. Bootstrapping & CKKS.md

* PUSH NOTE : 17. BGV Scheme.md

* PUSH NOTE : 16. The GMW Protocol.md

* PUSH NOTE : 15. Garbled Circuits.md

* PUSH NOTE : 14. Secure Multiparty Computation.md

* PUSH NOTE : 13. Sigma Protocols.md

* PUSH NOTE : 05. Modular Arithmetic (2).md

* PUSH NOTE : 04. Modular Arithmetic (1).md

* PUSH NOTE : 02. Symmetric Key Cryptography (1).md

* PUSH NOTE : 랜덤 PS일지 (1).md
This commit is contained in:
2024-11-12 19:52:52 +09:00
committed by GitHub
parent 03f5dec26f
commit b426538413
11 changed files with 115 additions and 71 deletions

View File

@@ -98,5 +98,20 @@ Read the full text for the full context!
> I think it's very valuable to have first-class people around. \[...\] **I tried to go with people who had great ability so I could learn from them and who would expect great results out of me.**
---
## Summary By Claude 3 Sonnet
Here is a summary of the key points from the article "You and Your Research" by Richard Hamming:
- Hamming discusses what separates the great scientists who make significant contributions from the merely ordinary ones. He argues that great scientists possess certain key traits and approaches.
- Great scientists work on important problems rather than following the crowd. They have courage, ambition, and become emotionally invested in their work.
- Changing viewpoints and converting perceived negatives into positives is crucial. Luck favors the prepared mind that seizes opportunities.
- Other key ingredients include continuous learning, knowing oneself and managing weaknesses, having a drive to work hard, tolerating ambiguity, shifting focus periodically to stay creative, and great scientists carefully pick their associates.
- Presentation and selling ideas is extremely important, sometimes as much effort as the research itself. Having the courage to promote unorthodox ideas is vital.
- While talent plays a role, Hamming argues factors like attitude, work habits, self-awareness and motivation are equally or more important determinants of whether someone does truly great, impactful research.
The article crystallizes insights from Hamming's decades of observing what distinguishes elite scientists based on his experiences at Los Alamos and Bell Labs.
[^1]: *if you don't think it is going to lead to something important, why are you at \[...\] working on it?"*
[^2]: *What will be the impact of \[...\] on \[...\] and how can I change it?*