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occamschainsaw

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Japanese toilet maker 'most undervalued and overlooked AI memory beneficiary'

tomshardware.com
1 points·by occamschainsaw·5 tháng trước·0 comments

Point of no returns: researchers crossing a threshold in the fight for funding

nature.com
3 points·by occamschainsaw·6 tháng trước·0 comments

Nvidia Details New A.I. Chips and Autonomous Car Project with Mercedes

nytimes.com
7 points·by occamschainsaw·6 tháng trước·2 comments

One of America's Most Successful Experiments Is Coming to a Shuddering Halt

nytimes.com
11 points·by occamschainsaw·6 tháng trước·2 comments

How Did India Conquer Space?

altermag.com
2 points·by occamschainsaw·7 tháng trước·0 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by occamschainsaw·8 tháng trước·0 comments

OpenAI Restructures to Become a More Traditional For-Profit Company

nytimes.com
6 points·by occamschainsaw·9 tháng trước·1 comments

Cartography of Generative AI

cartography-of-generative-ai.net
2 points·by occamschainsaw·9 tháng trước·0 comments

The EV tax credit is dead – here's what happens next

theverge.com
11 points·by occamschainsaw·9 tháng trước·22 comments

Pay no attention to the USB port behind the “no USB” sticker

theverge.com
556 points·by occamschainsaw·3 năm trước·318 comments

comments

occamschainsaw
·9 tháng trước·discuss
There’s a fascinating story about S Chandrasekhar (of Chandrasekhar limit fame) driving 100 miles to teach him every week. Teaching two students, the professor got a Nobel prize and the two students got a Nobel prize.

“ One story in particular illustrates Chandrasekhar's devotion to his science and his students. In the 1940s, while he was based at the University's Yerkes Observatory in Williams Bay, Wis., he drove more than 100 miles round-trip each week to teach a class of just two registered students. Any concern about the cost-effectiveness of such a commitment was erased in 1957, when the entire class -- T.D. Lee and C.N. Yang -- won the Nobel Prize in physics.”

Source: https://chronicle.uchicago.edu/951012/chandra.shtml