Hell is other networks. Today @ahl.bsky.social and I will be joined by Oxide engineers to discuss an incident where our combination with particular networking equipment resulted in a pathological system -- and how it was debugged and resolved. Join us, 5p Pacific!
I just heard that a cryptography professor at Indiana University had his house raided and was fired. Don’t know much more. https://www.heraldtimesonline.com/story/news/local/2025/03/28/fbi-department-of-homeland-security-agents-search-house-in-bloomington-indiana/82710451007/
@spoltier in countries without service, people of different social classes do not acquire social networks that span societal strata.
@HalvarFlake I would be interested to know how / why this is the case. In my limited anecdotal knowledge (Switzerland) the military tends to reflect existing social classes (e.g. people with an academic background are preferred for promotion up the ranks).
@grimalkina @analog_ashley I enjoyed this one a lot, and it got me to reflect about my experience in school. I don't think I experienced math anxiety early on (you talk about elementary school being crucial). It feels more like something that crept in gradually. I'm grateful that my parents were not very focused on my grades much if at all, I feel like that helped a lot.
I'm now curious about the cultural influences (I grew up and live in Switzerland). It seems there are some differences wrt how achievement-focused cultures are. (e. g. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S104160800800112X?via%3Dihub), not sure how well-studied that is.
Github/Copilot rant ahead
@ligasser
If you're org admin, you should be able to disable it in
https://github.com/organizations/<your_org>/settings/copilot/policies
Edit: I've not seen it add itself automatically to PRs yet, that may be some other setting I've not seen.
@embedded @logicalelegance @stoneymonster I may have missed it, but I can't believe the wasp detector project wasn't mentioned!
This week, Elecia( @logicalelegance ) and Chris( @stoneymonster ) host Kwabena Agyeman, CEO of OpenMV LLC for a chat about more powerful and tiny programmable cameras.
Join them here ( https://embedded.fm/episodes/497 ) on the latest episode of Embedded.
Here's Kwabena on an upcoming MicroPython feature:
#software #hardware #engineering #embedded #camera #iot #openmv #ml #ai
New Change, Technically episode is out: WHO'S AFRAID OF MATH?
We tackle *math anxiety,* @analog_ashley teaches me about vulnerable circuits in the brain and being vulnerable about teaching, and I read a HECK of a lot of science to bring you this episode.
I hope you enjoy our deep dive into math anxiety, what we know about it, what we can do about it, and why we think you shouldn't feel bad if math makes you feel bad ❤️
https://www.changetechnically.fyi/2396236/episodes/16876929-who-s-afraid-of-math
Two fascinating new papers on LLM interpretability from Anthropic
https://simonwillison.net/2025/Mar/27/tracing-the-thoughts-of-a-large-language-model/
Both papers are great, but the best thing about them is they aren't published as PDFs! They are glorious, mobile friendly web pages which even include several interactive diagrams. Love this so much. https://transformer-circuits.pub/2025/attribution-graphs/biology.html#dives-multilingual
In the first millennium CE, mathematicians performed the then-complex calculations needed to compute the date of Easter. Of course, with our modern digital calendars, this task is now performed automatically by computers; and the older calendrical algorithms are now mostly of historical interest only.
In the Age of Sail, mathematicians were tasked to perform the intricate spherical trigonometry calculations needed to create accurate navigational tables. Again, with modern technology such as GPS, such tasks have been fully automated, although spherical trigonometry classes are still offered at naval academies, and ships still carry printed navigational tables in case of emergency instrument failures.
During the Second World War, mathematicians, human computers, and early mechanical computers were enlisted to solve a variety of problems for military applications such as ballistics, cryptanalysis, and operations research. With the advent of scientific computing, the computational aspect of these tasks has been almost completely delegated to modern electronic computers, although human mathematicians and programmers are still required to direct these machines. (1/3)
Going to put this out there in light of news of other researchers moving, because I think information sharing in our communities is a form of power, but Ashley and I are looking at opportunities outside of the US right now and considering it. I want to signal our openness to it.
Especially for her, as a tenured teaching professor in neurobiology whose entire lab & teaching practice is deeply grounded in equity & increasing success in STEM. Her extraordinary work makes local communities flourish
Models should take languages into account, but also cultures
Arabic is not a culture. It includes many dialects, and many cultures
@amr-keleg.bsky.social
surveys the current practices in https://alphaxiv.org/pdf/2503.15003
And finishes with a call
📈🤖
#LLMs #multiculturality #AI #RLHF
@cecallihelper.bsky.social
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2025/03/trump-administration-accidentally-texted-me-its-war-plans/682151/ is worth a read and a great endorsement of @signalapp!
"Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) slammed Defense Secretary Pete #Hegseth, calling him a danger to the country and the United States’ military after The #Atlantic reported on Monday that its editor-in-chief Jeffrey Goldberg had been included on a #Signal channel that..." www.ktsm.com/hill-politic... #law
Moulton: Hegseth a danger to U...
Wow - 23andme files for bancruptcy, after the board refused a takeover bid by its current CEO. Now I wonder what will happen to the data of the 14 million samples they gathered so far. While I know that some people using 23andme don't care about their genome being available, others think it is highly private data and should not be publicly available.
Intel has a new CEO and it's Lip-Bu Tan! He was such an obvious front-runner that we assumed the more time that passed, the less likely it would be him. And yet! @bcantrill and I were joined by Max Cherney to discuss https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-sYvYYSxz2Y
If you're a fan of Isochrone maps and US census data (and who isn't?) Dan Snow just released https://opentimes.org/ and it's spectacular - I published some notes about it here, there's some very clever data engineering going on under the hood https://simonwillison.net/2025/Mar/17/opentimes/
code / data wrangler in Switzerland.
Recovering reply guy. Posts random photos once in a while.