Michael Dinitz
mdinitz.bsky.social
Michael Dinitz
@mdinitz.bsky.social
Associate Professor, Department of Computer Science, Johns Hopkins University.
https://www.cs.jhu.edu/~mdinitz/
Reposted by Michael Dinitz
And if you're faculty: I beg you, for the sake of everyone else in the world, strongly consider creating your own public webpages for your course instead of having everything locked up in Canvas.
October 9, 2025 at 12:04 AM
Congrats!
August 27, 2025 at 10:51 PM
Glad you liked our lightness paper! I'm pretty excited about that direction.
August 25, 2025 at 1:27 PM
Awesome, congrats!!
February 18, 2025 at 11:46 PM
I think there’s a lot to be said for going all in on something. It was neat being at Google and doing everything on Google systems. On the other hand, faculty autonomy is one of the nice things about academia compared to industry.
January 26, 2025 at 7:56 PM
We used zoom for lectures, canvas for communicating with students and organizing classes. We have a zoom license but also we’re a Microsoft campus. So classes are zoom & canvas, official stuff with admin is on teams, and most departments have an internal slack.
January 26, 2025 at 7:25 PM
Yeah, for cross-department you’re stuck with whatever the university is set up on. We’re also on teams, but no professors use it, so we all just use email still.
January 26, 2025 at 6:20 PM
Might be even more of a long shot in math, but I think that Zulip is actually better than slack, and it’s free for academics. I use it internally in my research group. I know the category theorists like it, so maybe that will convince other math people?
January 26, 2025 at 6:08 PM
Google meet is surprisingly good too, but Teams-only is crazy. Strongly recommend getting your department to use slack if possible. We just use the free version, and even that is great. Aside from messages, having a #teaching channel and an #advising channel to ask questions is super useful.
January 26, 2025 at 5:22 PM
We have a department slack that is very active for faculty. That’s now how I mainly communicate with other faculty in my department. Across departments it’s still email, though - no one I know is willing to use teams.
January 26, 2025 at 5:10 PM
I may or may not have some Hagoromo chalk in my office, if you want to make the best use of those blackboards :)
January 20, 2025 at 6:00 PM
Very interesting! Somehow I completely missed this self-improving literature, but it looks really neat. We're definitely *not* self-improving in this sense -- we're not "learning" the true distribution as we go and modifying our strategy, just continuing to use our fixed (but robust) search tree.
November 27, 2024 at 2:30 AM
I have similar problems with activation energy :). Not sure if this helps or not, but maybe a point I should have advertised: the entire construction and proof is ~2 pages. The rest of the paper is lower bounds, experiments, discussion, etc.
November 26, 2024 at 8:36 PM
I always love it when new settings (like algorithms with predictions) end up leading us back to classical problems. Hopefully there's more to be done on "robust" versions of classical optimal data structures!
November 26, 2024 at 8:21 PM