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3D capture is dope for media & entertainment, but the utilitarian applications might be even more impactful - literally x-ray vision making the unseen seen.
3D capture is dope for media & entertainment, but the utilitarian applications might be even more impactful - literally x-ray vision making the unseen seen.
With tools like Pix4D + RTK GPS (cm level accuracy) you can capture critical infrastructure, and overlay it at real-world… — Bilawal Sidhu (@bilawalsidhu)
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3D capture is dope for media & entertainment, but the utilitarian applications might be even more impactful - literally x-ray vision making the unseen seen.
yatharth on X: "having struggled with this problem with a loved one, i eventually realised i had to teach her to do the googling and figuring it out part herself too, and she did learn it, and she does things like that all the time now" / X
yatharth on X: "having struggled with this problem with a loved one, i eventually realised i had to teach her to do the googling and figuring it out part herself too, and she did learn it, and she does things like that all the time now" / X
— yatharth (@AskYatharth)
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yatharth on X: "having struggled with this problem with a loved one, i eventually realised i had to teach her to do the googling and figuring it out part herself too, and she did learn it, and she does things like that all the time now" / X
Jungwon on X: "Design is going to play one of the most important roles in the development of AI systems. It will impact how we interact with this raw intelligence, how the intelligence gets deployed, how it is evaluated, and how much we can trust it. It's an incredibly exciting time to" / X
Jungwon on X: "Design is going to play one of the most important roles in the development of AI systems. It will impact how we interact with this raw intelligence, how the intelligence gets deployed, how it is evaluated, and how much we can trust it. It's an incredibly exciting time to" / X
— Jungwon (@jungofthewon)
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Jungwon on X: "Design is going to play one of the most important roles in the development of AI systems. It will impact how we interact with this raw intelligence, how the intelligence gets deployed, how it is evaluated, and how much we can trust it. It's an incredibly exciting time to" / X
swyx 🔜 ai.engineer on X: "IMO @AnthropicAI is very close to making a breakthrough in productizable interpretability. For ~4 years all we've had to really control LLMs is temperature/top_p and logit bias. We recently got `seed` and constrained structured output, with `interactive=false` on the way. But https://t.co/Z8C28evxgN" / X
swyx 🔜 ai.engineer on X: "IMO @AnthropicAI is very close to making a breakthrough in productizable interpretability. For ~4 years all we've had to really control LLMs is temperature/top_p and logit bias. We recently got `seed` and constrained structured output, with `interactive=false` on the way. But https://t.co/Z8C28evxgN" / X
For ~4 years all we've had to really control LLMs is temperature/top_p and logit bias. We recently got `seed` and constrained structured output, with `interactive=false` on the way. But… — swyx 🔜 ai.engineer (@swyx)
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swyx 🔜 ai.engineer on X: "IMO @AnthropicAI is very close to making a breakthrough in productizable interpretability. For ~4 years all we've had to really control LLMs is temperature/top_p and logit bias. We recently got `seed` and constrained structured output, with `interactive=false` on the way. But https://t.co/Z8C28evxgN" / X
kasey on X: "#1 rule of hosting: Nothing—absolutely nothing—matters more than *who* you invite to the party (call it a party or not, you’re hosting a party). Who you invite sets the parameters of who your guests will meet, what kind of conversations they will have, and how they will feel." / X
kasey on X: "#1 rule of hosting: Nothing—absolutely nothing—matters more than *who* you invite to the party (call it a party or not, you’re hosting a party). Who you invite sets the parameters of who your guests will meet, what kind of conversations they will have, and how they will feel." / X
Nothing—absolutely nothing—matters more than *who* you invite to the party (call it a party or not, you’re hosting a party). Who you invite sets the parameters of who your guests will meet, what kind of conversations they will have, and how they will feel. — kasey (@kaseyklimes)
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kasey on X: "#1 rule of hosting: Nothing—absolutely nothing—matters more than *who* you invite to the party (call it a party or not, you’re hosting a party). Who you invite sets the parameters of who your guests will meet, what kind of conversations they will have, and how they will feel." / X
(2) Matthew Chapman on X: "With Detroit seeing a population and economic rebound, it's worth exploring what exactly caused the city to fall so hard — because there are REALLY important lessons for a lot of other U.S. cities, some of which are making similar mistakes to Detroit and not realizing it." / X
(2) Matthew Chapman on X: "With Detroit seeing a population and economic rebound, it's worth exploring what exactly caused the city to fall so hard — because there are REALLY important lessons for a lot of other U.S. cities, some of which are making similar mistakes to Detroit and not realizing it." / X
— Matthew Chapman (@fawfulfan)
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(2) Matthew Chapman on X: "With Detroit seeing a population and economic rebound, it's worth exploring what exactly caused the city to fall so hard — because there are REALLY important lessons for a lot of other U.S. cities, some of which are making similar mistakes to Detroit and not realizing it." / X
With Detroit seeing a population and economic rebound, it's worth exploring what exactly caused the city to fall so hard — because there are REALLY important lessons for a lot of other U.S. cities, some of which are making similar mistakes to Detroit and not realizing it.
With Detroit seeing a population and economic rebound, it's worth exploring what exactly caused the city to fall so hard — because there are REALLY important lessons for a lot of other U.S. cities, some of which are making similar mistakes to Detroit and not realizing it.
— Matthew Chapman (@fawfulfan)
·x.com·
With Detroit seeing a population and economic rebound, it's worth exploring what exactly caused the city to fall so hard — because there are REALLY important lessons for a lot of other U.S. cities, some of which are making similar mistakes to Detroit and not realizing it.
Telegram has launched a pretty intense campaign to malign Signal as insecure, with assistance from Elon Musk. The goal seems to be to get activists to switch away from encrypted Signal to mostly-unencrypted Telegram. I want to talk about this a bit. 1/
Telegram has launched a pretty intense campaign to malign Signal as insecure, with assistance from Elon Musk. The goal seems to be to get activists to switch away from encrypted Signal to mostly-unencrypted Telegram. I want to talk about this a bit. 1/
— Matthew Green (@matthew_d_green)
·twitter.com·
Telegram has launched a pretty intense campaign to malign Signal as insecure, with assistance from Elon Musk. The goal seems to be to get activists to switch away from encrypted Signal to mostly-unencrypted Telegram. I want to talk about this a bit. 1/
Mo Rajabi on X: "remote is hard. working in office is easier. but all our team wasn't in one room 2/3 of the day. so we're always at least somewhat remote, and slow. so built the grid – a simple way to talk/pair on screens quickly by clicking on teammates, without calling or meeting. "an https://t.co/GYlFnOW1qg" / X
Mo Rajabi on X: "remote is hard. working in office is easier. but all our team wasn't in one room 2/3 of the day. so we're always at least somewhat remote, and slow. so built the grid – a simple way to talk/pair on screens quickly by clicking on teammates, without calling or meeting. "an https://t.co/GYlFnOW1qg" / X
The Grid is a real-time collaboration tool specifically designed for distributed teams and remote work. It aims to provide an experience as close as possible to being in the same room by allowing teammates to instantly screen share, voice chat, see presence status and more just by clicking on each other's avatars.
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Mo Rajabi on X: "remote is hard. working in office is easier. but all our team wasn't in one room 2/3 of the day. so we're always at least somewhat remote, and slow. so built the grid – a simple way to talk/pair on screens quickly by clicking on teammates, without calling or meeting. "an https://t.co/GYlFnOW1qg" / X
Josh Ellis on X: "Not everything good can make money. Very few good things, in fact, can show an infinitely increasing profit every quarter or year. In order to do that, you either make shitty products or you do shitty things to make em cheaper and sell em higher. And some things should be free." / X
Josh Ellis on X: "Not everything good can make money. Very few good things, in fact, can show an infinitely increasing profit every quarter or year. In order to do that, you either make shitty products or you do shitty things to make em cheaper and sell em higher. And some things should be free." / X
— Josh Ellis (@jzellis)
·twitter.com·
Josh Ellis on X: "Not everything good can make money. Very few good things, in fact, can show an infinitely increasing profit every quarter or year. In order to do that, you either make shitty products or you do shitty things to make em cheaper and sell em higher. And some things should be free." / X
Eric Reinhart on X: "Unsurprisingly, it’s Harvard Medical School faculty who are most vocally calling for police action and punishment. As Fanon observed over 60 years ago, physicians are structurally disposed to be far more aligned with state violence than with struggles for freedom from it." / X
Eric Reinhart on X: "Unsurprisingly, it’s Harvard Medical School faculty who are most vocally calling for police action and punishment. As Fanon observed over 60 years ago, physicians are structurally disposed to be far more aligned with state violence than with struggles for freedom from it." / X
— Eric Reinhart (@_Eric_Reinhart)
·twitter.com·
Eric Reinhart on X: "Unsurprisingly, it’s Harvard Medical School faculty who are most vocally calling for police action and punishment. As Fanon observed over 60 years ago, physicians are structurally disposed to be far more aligned with state violence than with struggles for freedom from it." / X
Felix @ #BeMore2022 on Twitter
Felix @ #BeMore2022 on Twitter
This is a hot take in design 🔥 (I agree)."I know everyone will disagree with me... I am a big believer in taste over data and user research." Had the best time w/ @ThisIsBobBaxley for @ADPList mentor exclusive. Thanks Bob! pic.twitter.com/133DI1aLSG— Felix @ #BeMore2022 (@felixleezd) August 19, 2022
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Felix @ #BeMore2022 on Twitter
Elizabeth Goodspeed on Twitter / X
Elizabeth Goodspeed on Twitter / X
every logo looks like this now pic.twitter.com/u9AXRkgAHM— Elizabeth Goodspeed (@domesticetch) April 12, 2024
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Elizabeth Goodspeed on Twitter / X
Reggie James on Twitter / X
Reggie James on Twitter / X
With Hardware, you have to really live with the decisions you make Those decisions get transferred over to consumers that subconsciously realize they have to live with it tooThat’s why people complain about devices more than software & with the prestige of the Humane team…… pic.twitter.com/0rlni7dL0r— Reggie James (@HipCityReg) March 28, 2024
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Reggie James on Twitter / X
Nick on Twitter / X
Nick on Twitter / X
“And a dessert if you’re nasty” changed my brain chemistry pic.twitter.com/zSfDrOZQuD https://t.co/LmUAl44CFF— Nick (@NoNotHappyDays) March 12, 2024
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Nick on Twitter / X