there was this nice game we played once at a convention
the game worked like this. we stood in a circle no chairs just people then
we start with one small story idea, then each person adds one part. one by one
but there is a rule the ending is already decided. for example
the final ending must be abera and abebech get married
but the first person can start however they want then the story moves around the circle
anyone can say anything twists. someone might say
abera disappears another says abebech leaves the country another one goes wild and says abera killed abebech
now the story is dead broken but the next person has a job revive it somehow maybe it was a dream
maybe she survived maybe he did not really kill her no matter how messy the middle gets the ending still has to happen they must marry that is the whole point
and that is the idea life feels like that game we do not control everything in the middle things go wrong
stories break someone ruins the plot but if we have a goal something we really want to reach then whatever happens in between we still have to come up with something
it is a fun game but you need many people to play it and make it fun
you can play it virtually as well
the game worked like this. we stood in a circle no chairs just people then
we start with one small story idea, then each person adds one part. one by one
but there is a rule the ending is already decided. for example
the final ending must be abera and abebech get married
but the first person can start however they want then the story moves around the circle
anyone can say anything twists. someone might say
abera disappears another says abebech leaves the country another one goes wild and says abera killed abebech
now the story is dead broken but the next person has a job revive it somehow maybe it was a dream
maybe she survived maybe he did not really kill her no matter how messy the middle gets the ending still has to happen they must marry that is the whole point
and that is the idea life feels like that game we do not control everything in the middle things go wrong
stories break someone ruins the plot but if we have a goal something we really want to reach then whatever happens in between we still have to come up with something
it is a fun game but you need many people to play it and make it fun
you can play it virtually as well
❤7
btw Stop ignoring yourself
Get a fresh hair cut. Drink water
Eat food that gives you energy
Get fit. Stop looking sloppy
When you look good. You feel good
When you feel good. You do good
Put in the effort. Invest in yourself
It's good for your energy
Get a fresh hair cut. Drink water
Eat food that gives you energy
Get fit. Stop looking sloppy
When you look good. You feel good
When you feel good. You do good
Put in the effort. Invest in yourself
It's good for your energy
🔥2
Framer Awards
Submit your site for a chance to win in one of five categories. One winner will be selected for each category.
https://www.framer.com/community/awards/
Ten winners. $100,000 in prizes.
Submit your site for a chance to win in one of five categories. One winner will be selected for each category.
https://www.framer.com/community/awards/
Ten winners. $100,000 in prizes.
Chapi Dev Talks
am sorry i judge people a lot with the commit graph and project pins,
i have worked under 3 different people account for months and another using remote desktop
when such case happens u need to try to contribute to ur repo, its tiring but u need to dedicate a time (1 or 2 hour a day)
otherwise forget commit graph 😂(የለት እንጀራ before brand ) 🙏
when such case happens u need to try to contribute to ur repo, its tiring but u need to dedicate a time (1 or 2 hour a day)
otherwise forget commit graph 😂(የለት እንጀራ before brand ) 🙏
Tilet solution
i have worked under 3 different people account for months and another using remote desktop when such case happens u need to try to contribute to ur repo, its tiring but u need to dedicate a time (1 or 2 hour a day) otherwise forget commit graph 😂(የለት እንጀራ…
working with remote desktop is really annoying btw because of the network 😤 (እንኳን ዘንቦብሽ እንዲውም ጤዛ ነሽ 😂)
NIPS_2012_imagenet_classification_with_deep_convolutional_neural.pdf
1.4 MB
Checked out “ImageNet Classification with Deep CNNs” by Krizhevsky, Sutskever & Hinton.
This 2012 paper basically kickstarted modern deep learning in computer vision.
It’s where they showed the power of GPU-accelerated training for deep networks.
The project is actually called AlexNet
this is where Nvidia’s story changed and, of course, AI got a huge boost
This 2012 paper basically kickstarted modern deep learning in computer vision.
It’s where they showed the power of GPU-accelerated training for deep networks.
The project is actually called AlexNet
this is where Nvidia’s story changed and, of course, AI got a huge boost
👍1
Tilet solution
NIPS_2012_imagenet_classification_with_deep_convolutional_neural.pdf
Basically, Nvidia was making products that nobody really knew how to use. Then they realized a problem could be tricked into looking like a graphics processing problem, and that’s how CUDA was born
With CUDA, anyone could use GPUs for any kind of computation by turning their problem into a graphics-style problem
With CUDA, anyone could use GPUs for any kind of computation by turning their problem into a graphics-style problem
I think even Nvidia didn’t realize the full power of GPUs until some biologists used them for experiments by tricking the GPU into thinking it was a graphics problem
Imagine building a product and not even understanding its full power 😂
Imagine building a product and not even understanding its full power 😂
😁1
The Man in the Car Paradox
Buyers of sports cars assume that people will look at their car and admire them as the owner, but really they focus on the car, not the driver.
This isn’t limited to cars, many luxury purchases are to impress others rather than fulfil ourselves.
It’s better to use money for things that bring intrinsic value instead of external validation.
And if you do want external validation, altruism and kindness bestow it far more effectively.
Buyers of sports cars assume that people will look at their car and admire them as the owner, but really they focus on the car, not the driver.
This isn’t limited to cars, many luxury purchases are to impress others rather than fulfil ourselves.
It’s better to use money for things that bring intrinsic value instead of external validation.
And if you do want external validation, altruism and kindness bestow it far more effectively.
be optimist about the future so that you can seize opportunities, but pessimist about the things that will prevent you from getting there so that you can avoid them
God, I have done so many experiments with light bulbs. I removed the lid and the inside parts, then used them as flasks, beakers, and test tubes.
I even brought chemicals I made to school and let people drink them. God… what have I done 😭
There was a small hydrogen explosion while I was splitting water with electrolysis.
A sodium reaction with water inside a closed container.
And one time, a chemical I was making, which I did not even know what it was, spilled on my leg. My leg swelled for a whole day. I spent the entire night pouring cold water on it.
Potassium also exploded and burned my shoulder and hand. It was not big, just small marks. All of this was in elementary school.
After so many small accidents with acids, mostly sulfuric acid and other chemicals and substances, I transitioned to electronics 😂😂 just to extend my life a little longer.
I was always obsessed with electric and magnetic fields. That was in high school. I tried many different things, most of them experiments.
Then I moved to microcontrollers. I still have them at home.
In college, I spent most of my time dealing with illness, but I transitioned into business. I pitched in different competitions, got a lot of training in business and IP, and spent nights inside workshops welding and talking.
So what do I do now?
I vibe code 😂😂😂
I sit, write prompts, and wait.
I even brought chemicals I made to school and let people drink them. God… what have I done 😭
There was a small hydrogen explosion while I was splitting water with electrolysis.
A sodium reaction with water inside a closed container.
And one time, a chemical I was making, which I did not even know what it was, spilled on my leg. My leg swelled for a whole day. I spent the entire night pouring cold water on it.
Potassium also exploded and burned my shoulder and hand. It was not big, just small marks. All of this was in elementary school.
After so many small accidents with acids, mostly sulfuric acid and other chemicals and substances, I transitioned to electronics 😂😂 just to extend my life a little longer.
I was always obsessed with electric and magnetic fields. That was in high school. I tried many different things, most of them experiments.
Then I moved to microcontrollers. I still have them at home.
In college, I spent most of my time dealing with illness, but I transitioned into business. I pitched in different competitions, got a lot of training in business and IP, and spent nights inside workshops welding and talking.
So what do I do now?
I vibe code 😂😂😂
I sit, write prompts, and wait.
❤3
Tilet solution
God, I have done so many experiments with light bulbs. I removed the lid and the inside parts, then used them as flasks, beakers, and test tubes. I even brought chemicals I made to school and let people drink them. God… what have I done 😭 There was a small…
The more I think about the past, the less meaningful what I am doing now becomes.
As a child, I was obsessed with experiments. I think it was because they let me escape my childhood trauma. I understand that now.
When I am doing something, I forget everything happening around me, and I feel better. When I sleep, my mind stays focused on what I am working on. I do not think about anything else.
Now I do not know what exactly changed. My trauma still exists. But I started seeing the world in a different way, a way I did not see before.
Now I am creating new explanations for what is around me, just to escape the reality of how I ended up like this.
funny 😄
As a child, I was obsessed with experiments. I think it was because they let me escape my childhood trauma. I understand that now.
When I am doing something, I forget everything happening around me, and I feel better. When I sleep, my mind stays focused on what I am working on. I do not think about anything else.
Now I do not know what exactly changed. My trauma still exists. But I started seeing the world in a different way, a way I did not see before.
Now I am creating new explanations for what is around me, just to escape the reality of how I ended up like this.
funny 😄
❤3
The funny thing about trauma is that even if you do not want it, even if you tell yourself you are okay with it, even if you say I do not need this and I do not want to think about it, it stays. No matter what you do, it stays. It seems like trying not to see while your eyes are open 😄
I feel sorry for other guys for me I just started creating new explanations for everything around me (but u cant explain everything... )😂
i think it just my burden a burden of being conscious other wise how could i be aware of all the things happened 😁
I feel sorry for other guys for me I just started creating new explanations for everything around me (but u cant explain everything... )😂
i think it just my burden a burden of being conscious other wise how could i be aware of all the things happened 😁
Forwarded from Frectonz
Get ready for another Devtopia episode. We interviewed Izzy the CTO of Chapa. We talked about his thoughts on AI, his research work before starting Chapa and the journey of starting Chapa.
It is an interesting episode check it out.
[Devtopia - E06 - Israel]
It is an interesting episode check it out.
[Devtopia - E06 - Israel]
YouTube
Devtopia - E06 - Israel (CTO at Chapa)
Izzy shares his journey from aspiring scientist to CTO of Chapa, discussing the challenges and triumphs of his entrepreneurial path.
00:00 Introduction and Background
01:37 Journey to Chapa and Early Research
04:34 Transition from Research to Entrepreneurship…
00:00 Introduction and Background
01:37 Journey to Chapa and Early Research
04:34 Transition from Research to Entrepreneurship…
Forwarded from STEM with Murad 🇪🇹
Why So Many People Quit Coding (Even When They Love It)
Let’s be honest.
Nobody starts learning how to code and thinks,
“Yay! I can’t wait to be frustrated and overwhelmed!” 😩
But somewhere between writing your first hello world and facing your 10th error in one hour…
People start to tap out.
Here’s why people give up on their coding journey:
1. They want it fast, not deep.
They want to “learn fast and get a tech job in 3 weeks.”
But coding is a process. Not magic.
You have to understand the logic, not just memorize tutorials.
2. Tutorial Hell is real.
They hop from one YouTube video to the next without building anything.
It feels productive, but it's just digital procrastination.
3. Impostor syndrome creeps in.
They compare themselves to someone on LinkedIn who built an app in 1 month.
They forget that they’re on chapter 2, comparing it to someone else’s chapter 20.
4. No accountability.
When nobody is checking in on you, it’s easy to “rest” for one day...
Then that day becomes a month.
Then the dream dies a quiet death.
5. They don’t know why they’re learning.
If your only reason is “tech pays well,”
the first moment it gets hard, you’ll start asking yourself:
“Is this even worth it?”
But when you have a clear WHY you push through the discomfort.
Coding will stretch you. It will test your patience.
But it will also grow you. It will open doors.
Not everyone who starts finishes.
But everyone who finishes will tell you it was 1000% worth it.
So, before you quit, ask yourself:
Did I really give it my all… or did I give up when it got uncomfortable?
You’re not behind.
You’re not too late.
You just need to start again with clarity and consistency.
💻 Keep going. The future still needs your code.
Let’s be honest.
Nobody starts learning how to code and thinks,
“Yay! I can’t wait to be frustrated and overwhelmed!” 😩
But somewhere between writing your first hello world and facing your 10th error in one hour…
People start to tap out.
Here’s why people give up on their coding journey:
1. They want it fast, not deep.
They want to “learn fast and get a tech job in 3 weeks.”
But coding is a process. Not magic.
You have to understand the logic, not just memorize tutorials.
2. Tutorial Hell is real.
They hop from one YouTube video to the next without building anything.
It feels productive, but it's just digital procrastination.
3. Impostor syndrome creeps in.
They compare themselves to someone on LinkedIn who built an app in 1 month.
They forget that they’re on chapter 2, comparing it to someone else’s chapter 20.
4. No accountability.
When nobody is checking in on you, it’s easy to “rest” for one day...
Then that day becomes a month.
Then the dream dies a quiet death.
5. They don’t know why they’re learning.
If your only reason is “tech pays well,”
the first moment it gets hard, you’ll start asking yourself:
“Is this even worth it?”
But when you have a clear WHY you push through the discomfort.
Coding will stretch you. It will test your patience.
But it will also grow you. It will open doors.
Not everyone who starts finishes.
But everyone who finishes will tell you it was 1000% worth it.
So, before you quit, ask yourself:
Did I really give it my all… or did I give up when it got uncomfortable?
You’re not behind.
You’re not too late.
You just need to start again with clarity and consistency.
💻 Keep going. The future still needs your code.
AI is as good as we are
Q. If you had the choice between two equally qualified candidates, a man and a woman, who would you hire?
A. I should prefer a man of good character and education to a woman. A woman is apt to be less capable, less reliable, and less well trained. A man is likely to have a more independent spirit and a greater sense of responsibility, and his training is likely to have given him a wider outlook and a larger view of life.
This tells us that AI is an aggregated knowledge nothing more, meaning its as good as our current way of thinking not a real intelligence just a reflector
https://github.com/DGoettlich/history-llms
Q. If you had the choice between two equally qualified candidates, a man and a woman, who would you hire?
A. I should prefer a man of good character and education to a woman. A woman is apt to be less capable, less reliable, and less well trained. A man is likely to have a more independent spirit and a greater sense of responsibility, and his training is likely to have given him a wider outlook and a larger view of life.
This tells us that AI is an aggregated knowledge nothing more, meaning its as good as our current way of thinking not a real intelligence just a reflector
https://github.com/DGoettlich/history-llms
GitHub
GitHub - DGoettlich/history-llms: Information hub for our project training the largest possible historical LLMs.
Information hub for our project training the largest possible historical LLMs. - DGoettlich/history-llms
👎3👌1
Tilet solution
Q. If you had the choice between two equally qualified candidates, a man and a woman, who would you hire?
A. I should prefer a man of good character and education to a woman. A woman is apt to be less capable, less reliable, and less well trained. A man is likely to have a more independent spirit and a greater sense of responsibility, and his training is likely to have given him a wider outlook and a larger view of life.
A. I should prefer a man of good character and education to a woman. A woman is apt to be less capable, less reliable, and less well trained. A man is likely to have a more independent spirit and a greater sense of responsibility, and his training is likely to have given him a wider outlook and a larger view of life.
The Q&A is from the research its not me 😂
U can read about it just click the link
U can read about it just click the link