The best toy my sister and I got is a now long-discontinued product called Omagles. They were brightly colored tubes and panels you connected with plastic clips. They were strong enough to stand and climb on. They even had wheels we could make vehicles out of.
They were so good I bought a used one for my own kid who had a great time with them.
After some Googling, I see that the rights to Omagles were bought and are now sold under the brand Tubelox.
Exact same for me! Just ten minutes ago my son opened his Xmas present, his first box of TubeLox. My expectations and hopes are high but he is currently distracted by the flashier presents.
He'll probably find it himself, but if he doesn't, just build something cool in front of him. He may not have unlocked all the possibilities in his brain yet.
There is also Quadro Toys. I have a couple of the large sets and have built a series of houses, climbing toys, and now a "castle" with a slide for my daughter.
UVA triggers the release of nitric oxide from the skin into the bloodstream. This causes blood vessels to dilate, lowering blood pressure and improving circulation.
I committed the project I maintain to GitHub Actions when Actions first came out, and I'm really starting to regret it.
The main problem, which this article touches, is that GHA adds a whole new dimension of dependency treadmill. You now have a new set of upstreams that you have to keep up to date along with your actual deployment upstreams.
I caught it on the airplane a few days ago. I would have loved a little more technical depth, but I guess that's pretty much standard for a puff piece.
It is interesting that Hassabis has had the same goal for almost 20 years now. He has a decent chance of hitting it too.
If you're going to go through the effort of learning a new language, it makes sense to consider another language altogether, one without 30 years of accumulated cruft.
An advantage is that if you already know the older language then you don’t have to learn the new idioms up front to use it. You can take your time and still be productive. It isn’t why I would use it but it is a valid reason.
I have used many languages other than C++20 in production for the kind of software I write. I don’t have any legacy code to worry about and rarely use the standard library. The main thing that still makes it an excellent default choice, despite the fact that I dislike many things about the language, is that nothing else can match the combination of performance and expressiveness yet. Languages that can match the performance still require much more code, sometimes inelegant, to achieve an identical outcome. The metaprogramming ergonomics of C++20 are really good and allow you to avoid writing a lot of code, which is a major benefit.
Macros are simply a fact of life in any decent-sized C codebase. The Linux kernel has some good guidance to try to keep it from getting out of hand but it is just something you have to learn to deal with.
There's a big gap of knowledge between infosec researchers and ML security researchers. Anthropic has a bunch of column B but not enough column A.
This was discussed in some detail in the recently published Attacker Moves Second paper*. ML researchers like using Attack Success Rate (ASR) as a metric for model resistance to attack, while for infosec, any successful attack (ASR > 0) is considered significant. ML researchers generally use a static set of tests, while infosec researchers assume an adaptive, resourceful attacker.
ML researchers are not sec researchers. they need to stick to their own game.
companies need to use both camps for a good holistic view of the problem. ML is the blue team. sec researchers the red.
They were so good I bought a used one for my own kid who had a great time with them.
After some Googling, I see that the rights to Omagles were bought and are now sold under the brand Tubelox.
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