"Mathematical Methods for Computer Vision, Robotics, and Graphics" is a free Stanford resource with more than 200 pages of applied mathematics for modern technologies.
The notes cover linear algebra, multivariable calculus, optimisation, differential equations, numerical methods, Fourier analysis, and geometry, always with a strong connection to real computational problems.
What makes this material particularly interesting is that it bridges the gap between abstract mathematics and the technologies behind modern robotics, computer vision, computer graphics, and AI systems.
It is a resource I strongly recommend to both readers who already have a solid mathematical foundation and those who want to deepen their understanding through a rigorous yet accessible treatment of the subject.
https://t.co/yEEPWDqiH0
I have found that the 2nd brain becomes a more effective search engine when I ask it to find research papers related to the subject matter in the vault.
Check out this absolute master piece by Jonathan Gratus titled '' A Pictorial Introduction to Differential Geometry, Leading to Maxwell Equations in 3 Pictures'' which is available on arXiv.
To quote the author: ''When I was young, somewhere around 12, I was given a book on relativity, gravitation and cosmology. Being dyslexic I found reading the text torturous. However I really enjoyed the pictures.''
It's a short primer, full of nice figures, perfect for those who love visual examples.
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei:
"The cheapest way to use Claude is also the smartest. Most devs do the exact opposite"
this is one of the best interviews I've seen in a long time
in this interview he breaks down exactly how a system changes everything:
- the memory and context features that turn Claude into a second brain
- the knowledge architecture most users don't know Claude can build
- the integration layer that connects Claude to your actual workflow
- why typing one question at a time is the most expensive way to use Claude
if you've been using Claude for months and still start every conversation from scratch with zero context, you don't have a Claude problem. you have a system problem
instead of another show tonight, watch this
make sure to bookmark it before it gets lost in your feed
full guide in the article below
I don't share geometry resources very often, but "Elementary Geometry from an Advanced Standpoint" by Edwin E. Moise is one that I think is worth bookmarking.
It's a free book of more than 700 pages that covers Euclidean geometry, congruence, similarity, geometric transformations, analytic geometry, coordinates, constructions, areas, volumes, and the foundations of geometry, all with a rigorous yet readable university-level approach.
Some of these topics may seem old-fashioned at first glance, but many ideas from classical geometry still appear today in computer graphics, computer vision, CAD, robotics, game engines, and geometric algorithms.
https://t.co/kRKSvwuNNZ
@LeoCapital_01@SpaceX An investment in @AST_SpaceMobile would be much more attractive if they actually had a product to sell. Right now, it’s a huge market cap riding on hope.