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  1. blog.jlcarveth.dev, , more info

    Exploring the MangoPi - A Journey into RISC-V Assembly.
    By John L. Carveth
  2. Dusted Codes, , more info

    .NET Blazor
    .NET Blazor has been touted as a revolutionary framework that allows .NET developers to build interactive web applications using C# instead of JavaScript. It's mainly aimed at ASP.NET Core developers who want to build SPA-like apps leveraging the .NET ecosystem and a wealth of existing libraries and tools available via NuGet. It's Microsoft's latest instalment in an attempt to gain traction amongst frontend developers. With the recent release of .NET …
    By s (Dustin Moris Gorski, 2,532 words
  3. Oliver Palmer, , more info

    South Gippsland Farmers' Markets Calendar
    The weekend markets live-ish and direct in my hand A few years ago, I ended up spending 9 months living in South Gippsland, about two hours from Melbourne. We were doing a renovation on our house and had wonderful builders who took care of everything, so we left town for 9 months and left them to it. It was mid-Pandemic, too, so that provided a bit of extra incentive. My …
    457 words
  4. Stats, Maps n Pix, , more info

    Thanks for stopping by
    It's time to bring the curtain down on Stats, Maps n Pix now, after 1.5 million page views and 150 posts. I'll leave the blog archived here, but if you're looking for me, you can always find me via my business website. When I started this blog as a replacement for my original one I was still working at a university doing academic stuff and it kind of fitted in …
    By Alasdair Rae, 505 words
  5. Run161, , more info

    The Goldilocks principle and AI coaching
    Good morning, I’ve been thinking about the “Goldilocks principle” lately. You know, how the correct amount of something is great for you, but too little or too much does nothing, or even ends up hurting you. Like how ten minutes in the sun can be rejuvenating. Ten hours, however, can leave you burned. Everything in life has a correct dosage. But that dosage is not the same for every individual, …
    By Lars-Christian Simonsen, 1,153 words
  6. Whoops by Jonathan Libov, , more info

    AI still doesn't really understand memes
    Introduction Antimatter is a platform for teaching and learning through memes. Teachers use Antimatter to invite students to create memes based on their current unit as a means of what teachers call formative assessment, because, in the classroom as in life, in order to create a good story, joke, or puzzle, you have to really understand the subject matter. Antimatter was founded in January 2021, before DALL·E and other foundational …
    By Jonathan Libov, 2,994 words
  7. Enchanted Prose, , more info

    Go as a River
    Love is sacrifice, sacred land life-affirming (Gunnison River Valley, Colorado; 1948—1970): Crying can soothe us. All the more reason to let Shelley Read take you on this absolutely beautiful and sad journey. “There is a kind of sadness that transcends sadness, that runs like hot syrup into every crevice of your being . . . This is the sadness that changed everything.” Sadness is the pathos, beauty the richness in …
    By lorraine, 1,100 words
  8. From Squalor to Baller, , more info

    Now Available: Lost Monarch Eyewear Briefcases
    I’ve been writing about eyewear quite a bit this year. And as I mentioned recently, I’ve noticed that more men seem to be approaching spectacles as a collector’s item rather than a purely functional product. While I might not be quite at that level (…yet), I definitely know that managing a pile of glasses in random cases is a bit unwieldily. The best solution that I’ve come up with is …
    By Ian Anderson, 327 words
  9. Voyages Extraordinaires, , more info

    Kenji Miyazawa's Night on the Galactic Railroad
    In Japan, riding a steam train through outer space is a melancholy symbol of the human journey. Like the gentle drift of the sakura petal, the whistle of a train means a transition in life. That human quality... those melancholy, bittersweet coming of age lessons... were inherited from renowned writer Kenji Miyazawa's Night on the Galactic Railroad, whose own life was a tragic and all-too
    By Cory Gross, 71 words
  10. fberriman.com, , more info

    Month notes, November 2023
    Humble brag, but I have jetlag, and therefore I find myself wide awake at gone 2am. Seems as good a time as any for an update. Recently: We just got back from a trip to Australia, for Web Directions Summit. Alex spoke, mostly about the lost decade and the cost of JavaScript on the web eco-system (the market for lemons). The usual. I had screen printed him his very own …
    447 words
  11. New Historical Express – (Formerly Hatful of History), , more info

    Talk: The Opportunities and Limits of Digital Radical Archives (video)
    A few weeks ago, the database publisher Gale organised an online symposium on the archives of social movements called ‘Power to the People‘. I took part with a talk on online radical archives. You can view the video below:
    By hatfulofhistory, 49 words
  12. Damien Mannion, , more info

    Using custom data types in Python: reflections on the use of type hints
  13. the Heat Warps, , more info

    Alice Coltrane & Carlos Santana: Previously Unissued 1974 Recordings
    Very few LPs radiate a level of spiritual grandeur quite like the 1974 summit between Alice Coltrane and Carlos Santana, Illuminations. With Coltrane’s harp and soaring orchestration, uncharacteristically patient, technically precise lead work from Santana, and an aura of calm, fluid interaction among a top-tier rhythm section anchored by Dave Holland and Jack DeJohnette, the album is equally humble and humbling. Aurally transcendent by design. Illuminations was not necessarily new …
    By Jeremy Erwin, 2,330 words
  14. Togelius, , more info

    AI safety regulation threatens our digital freedoms
    There are those who believe that advanced AI poses a threat to humanity. The argument is that when AI systems become intelligent enough, they may hurt humanity in ways that we cannot foresee, and because they are more intelligent than us we may not be able to stop. Therefore, it becomes natural to want to regulate them, for example limiting which systems can be developed and who can develop them. …
    By Julian Togelius, 1,694 words
  15. Moments in Graphics | Blog, , more info

    Finding Real Polynomial Roots on GPUs
    A recent paper of mine performs an intersection test in a ray tracing shader. To this end, I had to compute all real roots of a polynomial of moderately high degree (10 to 26). Overall, computing polynomial roots is an extremely well-studied problem where many highly accurate and reliable methods are available [Press2007]. However, implementations of such methods on GPUs are rarely found. After experimenting a bit with different options, …
    175 words