memory heap
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science ∩ art = wonder

all memory blocks here are allocated by @a_v_p

GitHub: https://github.com/artyom-poptsov
Mastodon: https://fosstodon.org/@avp

https://memory-heap.org/~avp/
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Forwarded from Zhovner Hub
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Пацаны, что вам мешает вести себя так же?
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Обед: соевое мясо и макароны.

#vegan_food
#guix_patches

Обновил четыре пакета в GNU Guix:
2b321e7a861 gnu: touchegg: Update to 2.0.18.
22f944e4787 gnu: mbpfan: Update to 2.4.0.
009ca1c72ff gnu: evtest: Update to 1.36.
a365e9f4add gnu: haveged: Update to 1.9.19.
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Рубрика "Ээээкспериментыыы!"

#arduino
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Forwarded from Cosy Code
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На конференции.
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Сделал на ITGorky анимированную ёлочку на iMac (скорее всего, G3), используя Python 2.3.

#programming #art
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memory heap
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Видео-запись анимации.

Осторожно: мигающее изображение.
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☝🏻Google запустил Learn Your Way — новую экспериментальную платформу для образования

Система преобразует традиционные учебники в интерактивные и персонализированные материалы.

Основные функции включают адаптацию контента под уровень ученика и его интересы, а также генерацию разнообразных форматов: от иммерсивных текстов до квизов и аудиоуроков.🤓

Learn Your Way, работает на базе Gemini 2.5 Pro.🎓

Студенты в Чикаго уже продемонстрировали увеличение результатов тестов на 11 процентных пунктов благодаря этой платформе.📈
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Forwarded from Neural Shit
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⚡️⚡️⚡️ВНИМАНИЕ⚡️⚡️⚡️

РОБОТ ДЕЛАЕТ ЛУННУЮ ПОХОДКУ!

Спасибо за внимание
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Forwarded from Axis of Ordinary
Some facts that would blow the minds of people from a hundred years ago:

- We've built detectors that can sense ripples in spacetime itself. Their sensitivity is equivalent to measuring the distance to the nearest star, Alpha Centauri, with an accuracy of a single human hair's breadth.

- We linked telescopes around Earth to act like one planet-sized lens and photographed a black hole 55 million light-years away.

- Our best laboratory clocks are now so mind-bogglingly precise that they can measure time passing slightly slower at your feet than at your head due to gravity. Simply raising a clock by a few centimeters is enough to see a change.

- Using a special microscope, we can pick up and place individual atoms to spell letters.

- We can cool atoms to a whisker above absolute zero to merge them into one “super-atom” that behaves like a single wave.

- We have constructed rockets that launch payloads into orbit, then fly back through the atmosphere and land themselves upright on a landing pad or a ship at sea, ready to be flown again.

- We slam protons together to recreate early-universe conditions.

- We can store about a trillion characters, whole libraries, on fingernail-sized cards.

- About 500 hours of film are released every minute on a platform with an audience bigger than the entire population of Earth in 1925.

- Billions of people carry portable supercomputers in their pockets that offer instant access to the world’s knowledge, provide real-time location tracking, detailed global maps, and seamless video communication with anyone, anywhere. These machines contain parts so tiny (about 8 billionths of a meter) that they’re only a few dozen atoms wide.

- We build machines that can translate hundreds of languages in real-time, and their service is completely free of charge.

- People can control machines with their thoughts alone.

Keep this in mind the next time you laugh at the idea of artificial grass (i.e., self-replicating solar-powered factories), digital people, and Dyson spheres. We went from The New York Times predicting that manned flight was millions of years away to landing on the moon within a lifetime (a Dyson sphere can plausibly be built in 10–40 years).
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14.09.2025
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