Huh? That was University of Utah/Brigham Young University right. That is, if you're referring to Pons and Fleischman.
Obviously not, but there is larger potential than that. A microphone in a watch or phone can pick up the signal and relay the trigger to another server via for example MQTT. Then, you can have homeassistant act upon…
I'm still not sure I get it. I think it is 1. Put the BWT string in the right-most empty column 2. Sort the rows of the matrix such that the strings read along the columns of the matrix are in lexicographical order…
I have the feeling that B-splines would be a good solution for this problem. Given that they have a continuous zeroth (i.e., the function is continuous), first, and second derivative, the motion will always be smooth…
Multiple reasons, while technically better and more benign compression artifacts, it is computationally more expensive, limited quality improvements, encumbered by patents, poor Metadata format, poor colorspace…
I really like einops. This works for numpy, pytorch and keras/tensorflow and has easy named transpose, repeat, and eimsum operations.
Full paper link for the interested: https://ehdijrb3629whdb.tiiny.site
In medical imaging, data are often acquired using anisotropic resolution. So a pixel (or voxel in 3D) can be an averaged signal sample originating from 2mm of tissue in one direction and 0.9mm in another direction.
Conda indeed is slow. However, mamba is a drop in replacement for Conda and uses a way faster solver, which makes it a lot more palatable.
Not quite what you are looking but if you're interested in Operation Market Garden: for the Dutch maps there is https://www.topotijdreis.nl, which gives you historical maps with a year slider. This can at least help one…
CGP Grey also made an excellent video about it, which he dubbed the NaPoVoInterCo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUX-frlNBJY
But Chinese (or mandarin) is not a context-free grammar whereas I believe that encoding a language on a turing machine implies a context-free grammar so this example doesn't hold.
I think maybe it's poorly phrased. As far as I can tell, their linear regression example for eq. 2 has an unique solution, but I think they state I that when optimizing for cosine similarity you can find non-unique…
The thing is you use synthetic data to when it is difficult to obtain real data. For example, in medical imaging, it is very expensive to collect MRI scans to build a large dataset. Not to mention the potential privacy…
Surely not, but if you practicing to get better at programming using AoC, LLMs are unlikely to help you.
Maybe better programmer not so much, but I'd say the spirit of AoC is to crack a puzzle and translate the solution into code. Solving this using LLM will not help you getting better at solving puzzles, solving puzzles,…
Obviously you can, but in the grand scheme of things people should share more details about their method so people can improve on it in the future, no?
I mean, you can't just share the weights of the model and call it a day, right? You have to share details on what and why you are doing. You must communicate this somehow. In theory, you might be able to do this in a…
I guessed as much, but I wasn't able to confirm. Thanks for the search.
So the solution would be to continue emitting greenhouse gases and ensure it will also get worse in 30 or 50 years? > The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago, the second best time is now. Said to be a Chinese…
First of all, great blog post with great examples. Reminds me of distill.pub used to be. Second, the article correctly states that typically L2 weight decay is used, leading to a lot of weights with small magnitudes.…
Not all of these are mutually exclusive, but there is also a fourth option: - ADHD was severely underdiagnosed in the past and got more accurately diagnosed in recent years
Most Europeans also have a lower cost of living. So maybe the correct metric is average purchasing power, which goes down if the wages go down (that said, maybe only when viewed for lower or middle class incomes. It…
> "Google is inserting AI into art history." The phrasing of the subtitle implies that active interference or malicious intent is occurring while I don't believe the article shows this is the case.
The first edition of the C programming language was released in 1978, the second version in 1988. The first time something on Unicode was mentioned was also 1988, and the consortium was founded in 1991. UTF-8 was…
Huh? That was University of Utah/Brigham Young University right. That is, if you're referring to Pons and Fleischman.
Obviously not, but there is larger potential than that. A microphone in a watch or phone can pick up the signal and relay the trigger to another server via for example MQTT. Then, you can have homeassistant act upon…
I'm still not sure I get it. I think it is 1. Put the BWT string in the right-most empty column 2. Sort the rows of the matrix such that the strings read along the columns of the matrix are in lexicographical order…
I have the feeling that B-splines would be a good solution for this problem. Given that they have a continuous zeroth (i.e., the function is continuous), first, and second derivative, the motion will always be smooth…
Multiple reasons, while technically better and more benign compression artifacts, it is computationally more expensive, limited quality improvements, encumbered by patents, poor Metadata format, poor colorspace…
I really like einops. This works for numpy, pytorch and keras/tensorflow and has easy named transpose, repeat, and eimsum operations.
Full paper link for the interested: https://ehdijrb3629whdb.tiiny.site
In medical imaging, data are often acquired using anisotropic resolution. So a pixel (or voxel in 3D) can be an averaged signal sample originating from 2mm of tissue in one direction and 0.9mm in another direction.
Conda indeed is slow. However, mamba is a drop in replacement for Conda and uses a way faster solver, which makes it a lot more palatable.
Not quite what you are looking but if you're interested in Operation Market Garden: for the Dutch maps there is https://www.topotijdreis.nl, which gives you historical maps with a year slider. This can at least help one…
CGP Grey also made an excellent video about it, which he dubbed the NaPoVoInterCo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUX-frlNBJY
But Chinese (or mandarin) is not a context-free grammar whereas I believe that encoding a language on a turing machine implies a context-free grammar so this example doesn't hold.
I think maybe it's poorly phrased. As far as I can tell, their linear regression example for eq. 2 has an unique solution, but I think they state I that when optimizing for cosine similarity you can find non-unique…
The thing is you use synthetic data to when it is difficult to obtain real data. For example, in medical imaging, it is very expensive to collect MRI scans to build a large dataset. Not to mention the potential privacy…
Surely not, but if you practicing to get better at programming using AoC, LLMs are unlikely to help you.
Maybe better programmer not so much, but I'd say the spirit of AoC is to crack a puzzle and translate the solution into code. Solving this using LLM will not help you getting better at solving puzzles, solving puzzles,…
Obviously you can, but in the grand scheme of things people should share more details about their method so people can improve on it in the future, no?
I mean, you can't just share the weights of the model and call it a day, right? You have to share details on what and why you are doing. You must communicate this somehow. In theory, you might be able to do this in a…
I guessed as much, but I wasn't able to confirm. Thanks for the search.
So the solution would be to continue emitting greenhouse gases and ensure it will also get worse in 30 or 50 years? > The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago, the second best time is now. Said to be a Chinese…
First of all, great blog post with great examples. Reminds me of distill.pub used to be. Second, the article correctly states that typically L2 weight decay is used, leading to a lot of weights with small magnitudes.…
Not all of these are mutually exclusive, but there is also a fourth option: - ADHD was severely underdiagnosed in the past and got more accurately diagnosed in recent years
Most Europeans also have a lower cost of living. So maybe the correct metric is average purchasing power, which goes down if the wages go down (that said, maybe only when viewed for lower or middle class incomes. It…
> "Google is inserting AI into art history." The phrasing of the subtitle implies that active interference or malicious intent is occurring while I don't believe the article shows this is the case.
The first edition of the C programming language was released in 1978, the second version in 1988. The first time something on Unicode was mentioned was also 1988, and the consortium was founded in 1991. UTF-8 was…