She writes from a place of vulnerability and honesty. Most people write to sound smart and she writes to say "I don't know it all but there are some things I discovered I want to share." I almost feel like she writes to share things with people she loves, even though she doesn't know them directly.
She spoke alongside Randall Munroe at the last Strange Loop (RIP). Some people waited to talk to him afterwards, but I waited to talk to her. I don't think she got my joke that she should rewrite her bash scripts into perl and for that I'm truly sorry.
> I almost feel like she writes to share things with people she loves, even though she doesn't know them directly.
Thank you for articulating this!
I'm not Julia, but I'd just like to put down here that this is pretty much my philosophy for public speaking/giving presentations, and I have been trying to instill it in some coworkers who struggle with presentations. It's a great privilege to be able to convey to one's peers and loved ones things that you're (likely) a bit more familiar with than they are and which may help them with some matter.
I've been trying to use this to generate 3d character models from images. I am enjoying 3d printing these models to mess with my kids.
Not much of what I've found runs on local models but I'm always on the lookout. Meshy.ai (mentioned here) offers really nice generation but the cost adds up quickly.
This is more like a Claude-based skill set that orchestrates a bunch of different, separate systems. The closest equivalent to Trellis would probably be its usage of Huyuan-3D, which it uses to create some of the 3D object models.
From what I can tell, it takes an image and first segments it into objects versus environment then sends the environment to Marble 1.1 to generate a Gaussian splat,sends all the isolated individual objects to Hunyuan to generate GLB model files.
I run my own public instance of forgejo. Is this software I run on my own that syndicates other users' commits? GitHub *was* good for discovery; does GitSocial offer something similar? Are there ways I can push more of my contributions into GitSocial, or does that happen automatically when I start using it?
I think the GitSocial website would benefit from a "features and benefits" section rather than just a timeline view and demo, and I advise you to emphasize the benefits. I can see a TUI and a timeline of commits, but it seems like GitSocial is MUCH more exciting than just that.
To me, GitSocial offers freedom from corporate control and surveillance of my open source work, and that's really intriguing.
Discovery is still in the works, but the core idea is that all collaboration data is stored in git itself (be that the project or a fork). It's git all the way down :)
Weird, I didn't see Trump mentioned in the article. Do you still have it in your cache? Can you please post the version of the article that they showed you?
Trump is not mentioned in the story at all. I'm making a comment on how his entire administration is corrupt to the core.
I'm saying that I am considering how to tell my kids that lying and cheating and graft are the way America works now, and that this cop did exactly that.
If you are making a clever comment to expose my snarkiness, feel free to down vote me and maybe others will follow you down that path.
I'm not AI so it will sting a little bit and maybe I'll be more civil next time.
"We may be in the first generation of software engineers in the same position. If so, it’s probably a good idea to plan accordingly."
He compares software engineers to pro athletes. What does it mean to plan accordingly? Start working with the mob to fix poker games? I don't know what "plan accordingly" means at all but it is a thought provoking statement.
Imagine AI had never happened, but you had set a personal goal to write your last line of code in exactly five years. You can manage coders, you can write a novel about coding, you can run a yoga school for coders. You just can't code anymore. What do you do?
I know nothing about professional sports other than what I learned from Jerry Maguire, in which Rod Tidwell says "I got a shelf life of ten years, tops. My next contract's gotta bring me the dollars that'll last me and mine a long time. Shit, I'm out of this sport in 5 years. What's my family gonna live on? Huh?" That's the sentiment.
Sea otters and River Otters are quite different species and they live in very different habitats.
My understanding is that Sea Otters don't really travel very far. They have serious predator and there are large gaps in kelp Forrests so they ~stick a kelp bed that they like and live there. River otters in contrast are ~the apex predator of a river and have a pretty extensive range. A river otter traveling 100 miles is not uncommon.
Sadly the sea otter populations were decimated by Russian and later American hunters in the 19th century and never really recovered. My understanding (limited to California) is that the southern sea otter was thought to be extinct until they found a population in Big Sur. They have since been slowly trying to expand its range north, but 80 years on and they have not gone much farther than the Northern end of the Monterrey bay. I suspect that with enough time and patience the Sea Otter will slowly be reintroduced along the entire coast, but it will take a while.
She writes from a place of vulnerability and honesty. Most people write to sound smart and she writes to say "I don't know it all but there are some things I discovered I want to share." I almost feel like she writes to share things with people she loves, even though she doesn't know them directly.
She spoke alongside Randall Munroe at the last Strange Loop (RIP). Some people waited to talk to him afterwards, but I waited to talk to her. I don't think she got my joke that she should rewrite her bash scripts into perl and for that I'm truly sorry.
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