
AI/ML
GitHub - AntonOsika/gpt-engineer: Specify what you want it to build, the AI asks for clarification, and then builds it.
Specify what you want it to build, the AI asks for clarification, and then builds it. - GitHub - AntonOsika/gpt-engineer: Specify what you want it to build, the AI asks for clarification, and then ...
Home | Infinigen
Infinigen is a procedural generator of 3D scenes, developed by Princeton Vision & Learning Lab. Infinigen is optimized for computer vision research and generates diverse high-quality 3D training data. Infinigen is based on Blender and is free and open-source (BSD 3-Clause License). Infinigen is being actively developed to expand its capabilities and coverage. Everyone is welcome to contribute.
GitHub - JaidedAI/EasyOCR: Ready-to-use OCR with 80+ supported languages and all popular writing scripts including Latin, Chinese, Arabic, Devanagari, Cyrillic and etc.
Ready-to-use OCR with 80+ supported languages and all popular writing scripts including Latin, Chinese, Arabic, Devanagari, Cyrillic and etc.
Ready-to-use OCR with 80+ supported languages and all popular writing scripts including Latin, Chinese, Arabic, Devanagari, Cyrillic and etc.
Probable events poison reality - by Rob Horning
Reading the McKinsey reports back to back makes it clear how much consultancy-driven tech hype remains the same regardless of the differing affordances of an underlying technology, which are obviated by generalizing claims about “disruption” and “innovation.” No matter what a specific technology does — convert the world’s energy into gambling tokens, encourage people to live inside a helmet, replace living cognition with a statistical analysis of past language use, etc., etc. — all of them are treated mainly as instances of the “creative destruction” necessary for perpetuating capitalism.
Signal’s Meredith Whittaker: ‘These are the people who could actually pause AI if they wanted to’
The president of the not-for-profit messaging app on how she believes existential warnings about AI allow big tech to entrench their power, and why the online safety bill may be unworkable