🚀Join Chris Watkins’s Talk at Sharif University of Technology
🎙 Title: From Shortest Paths to Value Iteration to Q-Learning 👨‍🏫 Speaker: Chris Watkins (Professor of Computer Science, Royal Holloway) 📅 Date: Friday (Feb 21, 2025) 🕗 Time: 3:00 PM Iran Time 💡 Sign Up Here:https://forms.gle/ET3Y5jB6Jt9vkQ2x9
🚀Join Chris Watkins’s Talk at Sharif University of Technology
🎙 Title: From Shortest Paths to Value Iteration to Q-Learning 👨‍🏫 Speaker: Chris Watkins (Professor of Computer Science, Royal Holloway) 📅 Date: Friday (Feb 21, 2025) 🕗 Time: 3:00 PM Iran Time 💡 Sign Up Here:https://forms.gle/ET3Y5jB6Jt9vkQ2x9
Bitcoin is built on a distributed digital record called a blockchain. As the name implies, blockchain is a linked body of data, made up of units called blocks that contain information about each and every transaction, including date and time, total value, buyer and seller, and a unique identifying code for each exchange. Entries are strung together in chronological order, creating a digital chain of blocks. “Once a block is added to the blockchain, it becomes accessible to anyone who wishes to view it, acting as a public ledger of cryptocurrency transactions,” says Stacey Harris, consultant for Pelicoin, a network of cryptocurrency ATMs. Blockchain is decentralized, which means it’s not controlled by any one organization. “It’s like a Google Doc that anyone can work on,” says Buchi Okoro, CEO and co-founder of African cryptocurrency exchange Quidax. “Nobody owns it, but anyone who has a link can contribute to it. And as different people update it, your copy also gets updated.”