RANDOM POSTs
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Don’t Splat your Gaussians – Volumetric Ray-Traced Primitives for Modeling and Rendering Scattering and Emissive Media
https://arcanous98.github.io/projectPages/gaussianVolumes.html
We propose a compact and efficient alternative to existing volumetric representations for rendering such as voxel grids.
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Maya Curve history on polys
Read more: Maya Curve history on polysOne last old tutorial relocation…
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ByteDance Seedream 4.0 – Superโfast, 4K, multi image support
https://seed.bytedance.com/en/seedream4_0
โค Superโfast, highโresolution results : resolutions up toย 4K, producing a 2K image in less thanย 1.8ย seconds, all while maintining sharpness and realism.
โค At 4K, cost as low as 0.03 $ per generation.
โค Naturalโlanguage editingย โ You can instruct the model to โremove the people in the background,โ โadd a helmetโ or โreplace this with that,โ and it executes without needing complicated prompts.
โค Multiโimage input and outputย โ It can combine multiple images, transfer styles and produce storyboards or series with consistent characters and themes. -
If we turned back the evolutionary clock, would a species similar to humans come to dominate the Earth again?
Read more: If we turned back the evolutionary clock, would a species similar to humans come to dominate the Earth again?www.bbc.com/future/story/20190709-would-humans-evolve-again-if-we-rewound-time
American palaeontologist Stephen Jay Gould proposed : What would happen if the hands of time were turned back to an arbitrary point in our evolutionary history and we restarted the clock?
Gould reckoned that humanityโs evolution was so rare that we could replay the tape of life a million times and we wouldnโt see anything like Homo sapiens arise again. His reasoning was that chance events play a huge role in evolution.
Put simply, evolution is the product of random mutation.
Experimental evolutionary biologists do have the means to test some of Gouldโs theories on a microscale with bacteria.
Many bacterial evolution studies have found, perhaps surprisingly, that evolution often follows very predictable paths over the short term, with the same traits and genetic solutions frequently cropping up. There are evolutionary forces that keep evolving organisms on the straight and narrow. Natural selection is the โguiding handโ of evolution, reigning in the chaos of random mutations and abetting beneficial mutations. This means many genetic changes will fade from existence over time, with only the best enduring. This can also lead to the same solutions of survival being realized in completely unrelated species.
What about the underlying physical laws (ie: gravity) โ do they favour predictable evolution? At very large scales, it appears so.
This means that the broad โrulesโ for evolution would remain the same no matter how many times we replayed the tape. There would always be an evolutionary advantage for organisms that harvest solar power. There would always be opportunity for those that make use of the abundant gases in the atmosphere. And from these adaptations, we may predictably see the emergence of familiar ecosystems. But ultimately, randomness, which is built into many evolutionary processes, will remove our ability to โsee into the futureโ with complete certainty. -
Artifacts now available for all Claude.ai users across our Free, Pro, and Team plans
Read more: Artifacts now available for all Claude.ai users across our Free, Pro, and Team planshttps://www.anthropic.com/news/artifacts
Artifacts turn conversations with Claude into a more creative and collaborative experience.ย
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Lucasfilm to shut Singapore operations, affecting more than 300 employees
Lucasfilm is winding down operations in Singapore after nearly 20 years in the country, with parent company Disney citing economic factors affecting the industry.
According to an ILM employee in Singapore, there are 340 staff members in the company and work will continue until the end of the year.
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AI and the Law – ๐ฌ๐ผ๐๐ฟ (๐ฝ๐ฟ๐ถ๐๐ฎ๐๐ฒ๐น๐) ๐๐ต๐ฎ๐ฟ๐ฒ๐ฑ ๐๐ต๐ฎ๐๐๐ฃ๐ง ๐ฐ๐ต๐ฎ๐๐ ๐บ๐ถ๐ด๐ต๐ ๐ฏ๐ฒ ๐๐ต๐ผ๐๐ถ๐ป๐ด ๐๐ฝ ๐ผ๐ป ๐๐ผ๐ผ๐ด๐น๐ฒ
Many users assume shared conversations are only seen by friends or colleagues โ but when you use OpenAIโs share feature, those chats get now indexed by search engines like Google.
Meaning: your โprivateโ AI prompts could end upย veryย public. This is calledย Google dorkingย โ and itโs shockingly effective.
Overย 70,000ย chats are now publicly viewable. Some are harmless.
Others? They might expose sensitive strategies, internal docs, product plans, even company secrets.
OpenAI currentlyย does not block indexing. So if youโve ever shared something thinking itโs โjust a linkโ โ it might now be searchable by anyone. You can even build a bot to crawl and analyze these.
Welcome to the new visibility layer of AI. I canโt say I am surprisedโฆ
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