I had read that game industry, was an invitation only club. That's why I try to go the indie route. The market is flooded with competition now, too many people risking everything to try and catch a break.
With these studies, I think they're trying to keep cigarette smokers buying packs of cigarettes.
The last paper popular paper on this subject tested using hours of continuous exposure, and this study doesn't clearly state the dosing duration.
36 mg/ml is much higher than what is typically carried in stores. It's hard to find anyone local who sells 12mg/ml.
Since this study seems like they're submerging the tissue in liquid, why isn't there a comparison with submersion in water? I know when I'm in the bathtub for more than an hour, my skin turns to putty, so I can only imagine the result if I stayed submerged for 24 hours.
What's the next challenge?
I built a network using PyBrain to sort a list, and I'm wondering what the next level of difficulty is. Can you suggest some?
I saw this article about a biologically inspired artificial neuron. What would this neuron have to do, for you to take notice, or divert your attention to it?
http://www.technologyreview.co...
I'm also a journal user and was I wondering why journal software isn't an easy switch, so I created doodL.E. http://doodle.redadept.com/ which should be launching on iOS this week. I made the software as lightweight and fast as possible. I'm also a doodler, so I made the tool art capable.
My email address is brook_seaton[at]redadept.com if you want to begin a conversation.
Mr. Stallman,
The open software movement is proposed as an endeavor to save humanity from constantly reinventing the wheel. How close or far is the reality from the ideal? The entire open source community cannot be composed entirely of altruists. I imagine the community is primarily composed of programmers who wish to retain their source code and skill set if they change employers.
If the open source community were to make the transition to a "technological singularity" what are the major and minor roadblocks you see in transitioning toward this endeavor?
I've attempted to read all of the Hugo award winners and Time's list of 100 best American literature. Many sci-fi stories have an erotic love interest, so you might want to skim the books before you hand it over to the kids. I was introduced to sci-fi in elementary school with Interstellar Pig and read a handful of the author's books. Heinlein is great future tech, so I recommend "Friday." I noticed nobody mentioned Philip K. Dick, so "Do robots dream of electric sheep" is a great story about robotics, which is not even mildly similar to the "Bladerunner" movie. Farenheit 451 is like an action movie version of Orwell's 1984. "Flatland" was a fun book written by a mathematician. Also, "The Planiverse" is a fun book about Artificial Intelligence.
In your latest book "How to Create a Mind", you describe the human mind as a multilayered network of synapses. You describe that the mind has the ability to notify areas of the synapse network that information is likely to arrive. What does this advanced notification provide for the human mind? Also, why do you think this feature is critical to constructing artificial neural networks?
I had read that game industry, was an invitation only club. That's why I try to go the indie route. The market is flooded with competition now, too many people risking everything to try and catch a break.
It's over an hour long, if you want to skip to the cost/planning information, skip to 55:13 http://www.psfc.mit.edu/news/m...
With these studies, I think they're trying to keep cigarette smokers buying packs of cigarettes.
The last paper popular paper on this subject tested using hours of continuous exposure, and this study doesn't clearly state the dosing duration.
36 mg/ml is much higher than what is typically carried in stores. It's hard to find anyone local who sells 12mg/ml.
Since this study seems like they're submerging the tissue in liquid, why isn't there a comparison with submersion in water?
I know when I'm in the bathtub for more than an hour, my skin turns to putty, so I can only imagine the result if I stayed submerged for 24 hours.
Don't go unmasked into a small town, pickpocket the small town, and not leave that small town.
Also, give me a good lossy transparent image format.
Why isnâ(TM)t JPEG 2000 supported on all browsers? Wavelet compression was invented in the 1980s and itâ(TM)s still not supported on all browsers.
What's the next challenge? I built a network using PyBrain to sort a list, and I'm wondering what the next level of difficulty is. Can you suggest some?
I saw this article about a biologically inspired artificial neuron. What would this neuron have to do, for you to take notice, or divert your attention to it? http://www.technologyreview.co...
You're having tunnel vision, if you burrow a bit beyond the surface of this subject, you might unearth the truth.
Found it! https://youtu.be/AF3YU4lIpEc?t...
QA people need not apply.
I'm also a journal user and was I wondering why journal software isn't an easy switch, so I created doodL.E. http://doodle.redadept.com/ which should be launching on iOS this week. I made the software as lightweight and fast as possible. I'm also a doodler, so I made the tool art capable. My email address is brook_seaton[at]redadept.com if you want to begin a conversation.
Mr. Stallman, The open software movement is proposed as an endeavor to save humanity from constantly reinventing the wheel. How close or far is the reality from the ideal? The entire open source community cannot be composed entirely of altruists. I imagine the community is primarily composed of programmers who wish to retain their source code and skill set if they change employers. If the open source community were to make the transition to a "technological singularity" what are the major and minor roadblocks you see in transitioning toward this endeavor?
I've attempted to read all of the Hugo award winners and Time's list of 100 best American literature. Many sci-fi stories have an erotic love interest, so you might want to skim the books before you hand it over to the kids. I was introduced to sci-fi in elementary school with Interstellar Pig and read a handful of the author's books. Heinlein is great future tech, so I recommend "Friday." I noticed nobody mentioned Philip K. Dick, so "Do robots dream of electric sheep" is a great story about robotics, which is not even mildly similar to the "Bladerunner" movie. Farenheit 451 is like an action movie version of Orwell's 1984. "Flatland" was a fun book written by a mathematician. Also, "The Planiverse" is a fun book about Artificial Intelligence.
In your latest book "How to Create a Mind", you describe the human mind as a multilayered network of synapses. You describe that the mind has the ability to notify areas of the synapse network that information is likely to arrive. What does this advanced notification provide for the human mind? Also, why do you think this feature is critical to constructing artificial neural networks?