Out of curiosity, how was it discovered? You would have to look for it to find this linear combination.
These are extremely high prices. In Texas, we pay 12-15c.
So i assumed it would get crushed by OPQ (which requires training)
The story is actually quite interesting. The Serbs observed that a nighthawk would routinely fly the same route but their radar couldn’t lock on it unless the missile hatch were open, which they managed to elicit. In…
These signs are mostly on the highway
[flagged]
This seems to be incorrect. The correct way to combine measurements with various degree of precision is to use the inverse variance weighting law
Large cloud providers could offer that solution but then, crawlers can also change cycle IPs
Can you expand? What is “poison” referring to? Surely, burning coal as Germany’s current pace can’t be seen as a success, can it?
This is not how it works. The interviewer knows 1-2 problems and there is no time for profiling since they are rushing through their day, probably focused on their day to day work. You are the least of their concern,…
Very likely.
> Just look at health insurance companies for a prime example: they make profit by denying claims Despite being from Europe, I find this to be a shocking and erroneous interpretation. Clearly, health insurances have the…
Note that it's not done for performance reason but rather to generate clear feature maps.
I are
Interestingly, FAISS does exactly that before doing Product Quantization and it works very well (errors are much lower compared to no rotation). They call it “optimal PQ”. During training time, they iterate to find a…
The advised reader could devise a solution using public / private key where: - Alice communicates her public key - Bob communicates his - Alice encoders her cards with Bob’s public key - Bob does the same Problem solved!
I actually think war driving progress is a strong argument. Not to use any obvious examples (e.g. internet), I would argue war has a profound effect on the psyche of nations (whether they lose or win). A few examples: -…
This is far fetched. It’s a very thoughtful article.
If you save 32x memory with binarization, why not do a projection to a larger dimension? Say 4096 for instance. Could this actually improve performance WHILE reducing memory?
> a month. No, It says a week in the article. “Each aircraft takes about a week to have its AeroSHARK film applied, which requires high-precision workmanship from our personnel.”
It’s mind boggling how a country can be so rich as to spend millions of manhours on a project and never use it. Maybe we have become too rich as a species.
Column misnaming/typo is indeed a problem in pandas. I think a powerful IDE could do the trick though.
I wish the article made an attempt at providing a benchmark. I imagine that TSMC has a lot of prime age families so you can’t compare it against the overall population. Without it, one cannot make any inference in…
And the military: https://www-users.cse.umn.edu/~arnold/disasters/patriot.html
The ability for the government to spend money it doesn’t have doesn’t cease to amaze. The deficit was $1.6T last year (over 5% of the GDP) but 2024 is starting strong.
Out of curiosity, how was it discovered? You would have to look for it to find this linear combination.
These are extremely high prices. In Texas, we pay 12-15c.
So i assumed it would get crushed by OPQ (which requires training)
The story is actually quite interesting. The Serbs observed that a nighthawk would routinely fly the same route but their radar couldn’t lock on it unless the missile hatch were open, which they managed to elicit. In…
These signs are mostly on the highway
[flagged]
This seems to be incorrect. The correct way to combine measurements with various degree of precision is to use the inverse variance weighting law
Large cloud providers could offer that solution but then, crawlers can also change cycle IPs
Can you expand? What is “poison” referring to? Surely, burning coal as Germany’s current pace can’t be seen as a success, can it?
This is not how it works. The interviewer knows 1-2 problems and there is no time for profiling since they are rushing through their day, probably focused on their day to day work. You are the least of their concern,…
Very likely.
> Just look at health insurance companies for a prime example: they make profit by denying claims Despite being from Europe, I find this to be a shocking and erroneous interpretation. Clearly, health insurances have the…
Note that it's not done for performance reason but rather to generate clear feature maps.
I are
Interestingly, FAISS does exactly that before doing Product Quantization and it works very well (errors are much lower compared to no rotation). They call it “optimal PQ”. During training time, they iterate to find a…
The advised reader could devise a solution using public / private key where: - Alice communicates her public key - Bob communicates his - Alice encoders her cards with Bob’s public key - Bob does the same Problem solved!
I actually think war driving progress is a strong argument. Not to use any obvious examples (e.g. internet), I would argue war has a profound effect on the psyche of nations (whether they lose or win). A few examples: -…
This is far fetched. It’s a very thoughtful article.
If you save 32x memory with binarization, why not do a projection to a larger dimension? Say 4096 for instance. Could this actually improve performance WHILE reducing memory?
> a month. No, It says a week in the article. “Each aircraft takes about a week to have its AeroSHARK film applied, which requires high-precision workmanship from our personnel.”
It’s mind boggling how a country can be so rich as to spend millions of manhours on a project and never use it. Maybe we have become too rich as a species.
Column misnaming/typo is indeed a problem in pandas. I think a powerful IDE could do the trick though.
I wish the article made an attempt at providing a benchmark. I imagine that TSMC has a lot of prime age families so you can’t compare it against the overall population. Without it, one cannot make any inference in…
And the military: https://www-users.cse.umn.edu/~arnold/disasters/patriot.html
The ability for the government to spend money it doesn’t have doesn’t cease to amaze. The deficit was $1.6T last year (over 5% of the GDP) but 2024 is starting strong.