It depends on an individual's personal taste of how he/she understands things, some people like to YOLO and tinker while some like to read docs first before looking at any code and some like to do both synchronously. To me it seems the reason why there is no basis that one solution works better than others is exactly why it's easy to make trending/popular repos these days
What's the point of baking the best and most impressive models in the world and then serving it with degraded quality a month after releases so that intelligence from them is never fully utilised??
Last week I wanted to quickly view some Gaussian splats which I had trained on a remote server that didn’t have any open ports or a display device. So I ended up downloading everything locally just to inspect the results
This weekend I put together a terminal-based Gaussian splats viewer that renders directly in the terminal. It works over SSH and currently runs on CPU only and written in rust with claude code. I’ve found it to be pretty useful for quickly checking which .ply files correspond to which scenes and getting a rough sense of their quality.
Along the way, I also wrote a small tutorial on the forward rasterization process for Gaussian splatting on CPUs. You can check out the project here
I simply just draw in excalidraw and take a ss and past it in my obsidian note, I have a setup that automatically parses posts from my vault and then pushes them to my site