Article note: AI detectors are dirty snake oil, and plagiarism detectors should only be treated as suggestions, and only when the readings get >30% kind of high.
Anyone treating them as a replacement for judgement is just wrong.
Article note: Aw, looks like the iron law of bureaucracy got the Processing Foundation.
All resources directed to side projects, little-to-none to their ostensible purpose.
As much as it's an odd environment, it's IMO nearly the ideal first language.
Article note: ...Didn't they buy their way in to that market for like $17B less than a decade ago when they ate Altera?
What kind of financial shenanigans are going on with this spin-out?
x86 giant eyes outside cash injections, IPO for Programmable Systems Group within three years
Sandra Rivera is off as executive veep of Intel's Datacenter and AI group, and will instead be CEO of the x86 giant's now-soon-to-be-spun-off FPGA business.…
Article note: ...plausibly deniable [algorithmic collusion? predatory pricing?]
Like the old plague of "trivial process _on a computer_ counts as patent-able" patents, we have "Antisocial behavior _on a computer_ doesn't count as prosecute-able" dodges.
Biochemist Katalin Karikó and immunologist Drew Weissman won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Monday for their foundational research showing that chemical modifications to the molecular building blocks of messenger RNA (mRNA) could enable its use for therapeutics and vaccines—a realization crucial to the rapid development of the life-saving mRNA COVID-19 vaccines during the deadly pandemic.
The pair's prize-winning and tenacious work on different types of RNA culminated in a 2005 breakthrough study showing that chemical modifications of mRNA bases (nucleosides)—adenine (A), cytosine (C), uracil (U), and guanine (G)—could keep them from igniting innate immune responses and inflammation reactions, which had foiled previous efforts to use mRNA for therapeutics.
In our cells, mRNA is an intermediate molecule, a single-stranded copy of coding from the genes in our DNA blueprints that is then translated into functional proteins. (DNA uses bases A, C, G, and thymine (T), which is structurally similar to RNA's U.) The mRNA is copied (aka transcribed) from DNA in a cell's nucleus and then moves to the cytoplasm for its code-deciphering translation into proteins. Thus, mRNA is critical for protein production and is more accessible than DNA—features that made it an appealing target for developing therapeutics.
Article note: Can we please just burn the entire academic publishing industry to the ground?
It is in every possible way impeding a healthy research process.
Surprisingly it took until 2023 for allowing Linux’s modprobe to accept loading kernel modules from any arbitrary path. Rather than just specifying the module name and then looking up the module within the running kernel’s modules directory, modprobe can now allow passing a path to the module. Relative paths are also supported when prefixed with “./” for the path to the desired module.
Article note: Interesting.
They have a custom IC doing the glue, but it's still a Broadcom SoC (this time a BCM 2712) which probably means it still does the "boot via a blackbox running on the GPU" bullshit. Performance looks comparable to an RK3588 system so (as always) it's largely going to come down to software support and other ecosystem effects.
The 4GB=$60, 8GB=$80 pricing isn't unreasonable.
The 1x PCI-E lane on FPC is cool and should enable some nice applications and less-shitty storage media. The dedicated connections for UART and fan are nice, as is keeping analog video on some pins for those who want it.
Hopefully they don't run into another supply chain choke.
Photo by Emma Roth / The Verge
Despite doubts that the Raspberry Pi 5 would launch this year, the latest version of the microcomputer has arrived with some notable upgrades at a $60 starting price. Not only is it supposed to perform better than its predecessor but it’s also the first Raspberry Pi to come with in-house silicon.
Powering the brain of the Raspberry Pi 5 is a 64-bit quad-core Arm Cortex-A76 processor that runs at 2.4GHz, allowing for two to three times the performance boost when compared to the four-year-old Raspberry Pi 4. The device also comes with an 800MHz VideoCore VII graphics chip that the Raspberry Pi Foundation says offers a “substantial uplift” in graphics performance.
I got to try out the device for myself. While I didn’t have time to do much...
Article note: This is a nifty tale of architectural details and subtly different instructions.
Nice example for why knowing assembly is useful even if you don't generally work directly in it.
While the creative works from the 16th century can still be accessed and used by others, the data in some software programs from the 1990s is already inaccessible.