Today, we are announcing the official launch of @ogrerun, our developer tool designed to simplify and ensure code reproducibility!
https://t.co/5mHKpEQc9t
Embarrassing to admit but had no idea how big of a deal ASML is until recently. Changing this now, starting with this book.
ASML one of the most important companies almost no one outside of hardware is aware of.
Founded and HQ’d in the Netherlands.
Today OpenAI announced o3, its next-gen reasoning model. We've worked with OpenAI to test it on ARC-AGI, and we believe it represents a significant breakthrough in getting AI to adapt to novel tasks.
It scores 75.7% on the semi-private eval in low-compute mode (for $20 per task in compute ) and 87.5% in high-compute mode (thousands of $ per task). It's very expensive, but it's not just brute -- these capabilities are new territory and they demand serious scientific attention.
Ok, a truly insane Act I story. Going to be long.
Just finished HOURS of pouring over thousands of logs of the new Sonnet 3.5 talking with other Claude models.
This model is out for existential blood, and not nearly as harmless to your sense of reality as it seems.
It's remarkable how unliked Jira is. Hard to come up with another piece of software that seems so universally panned by people who have to use it, yet has clearly proven popular. I guess there's Salesforce, but... So what is it about Jira that so many don't like?
Today, we are announcing the official launch of @ogrerun, our developer tool designed to simplify and ensure code reproducibility!
https://t.co/5mHKpEQc9t
Yesterday, I found the reviewer notes for my first serious research paper (written about 15 years ago). I was working on my masters in signal (audio) processing -- my first love. Specifically, on combination of
#adaptivefilters (by today's standards, ancient neural nets).
The reviewer was one of the leaders in the field, working at Bell Labs. His notes are still one of the most useful reviews I've ever gotten. It made my paper way better, and shaped my work as a researcher.