An ER could easily triage people into an urgent care wing of the hospital, but hospitals don't have those. Because they don't have any incentive to provide anything resembling cost effective care.
The wave would be focused by the transducer (analog of a lens) so that the energy flux is highest at the focal point and presumably low enough not to cavitate outside the focal area. I.e. magnifying glass and the sun kinda thing.
I was just thinking the inference cost could be reduced by making hardware with less error correction in specific areas to get higher density, and let the NN work around the limitations.
Happened to me before, I thought it was a generator running at a construction site down the street. It wasn't that long ago but I don't recall exactly when it stopped or if anything correlated.
I would guess that it would be a metal spring of some sort that doesn't lose energy to thermal side effects of compressing and decompressing gas, for a higher round trip power efficiency. Or else it could be a relatively large gas reservoir so that it doesn't heat or cool the gas too much.
Yes but wouldn't the logging take up quite a bit of memory? Something like O(compute cycles* (log(lines of code)+log(memory allocated))) before compression.
The cern tour is really cool. They actually take you to see the instruments where possible. Got to see some huuuge copper busbars that they use to dump current from the electromagnets. And got to see some sections of the main tube that were in the repair area (maybe they were display units).