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mikhail-miguel

ArtroomAI - Download GUI to make Artificial Intelligence art without coding (artroom.ai). - 0 views

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    ArtroomAI: Download GUI to make Artificial Intelligence art without coding (artroom.ai).
mikhail-miguel

Toolbuilder - No code Artificial Intelligence tool building platform (toolbuilder.ai). - 0 views

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    Toolbuilder: No code Artificial Intelligence tool building platform (toolbuilder.ai).
mikhail-miguel

Helicone - Monitor GPT-3 with one line of code, add OpenAI key to Valyr for dashboard v... - 0 views

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    Helicone: Monitor GPT-3 with one line of code, add OpenAI key to Valyr for dashboard view (valyr.vercel.app).
mikhail-miguel

Tabnine - Tabnine helps developers write code faster, in any IDE (tabnine.com). - 0 views

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    Tabnine: Tabnine helps developers write code faster, in any IDE (tabnine.com).
mikhail-miguel

AIGen.tools - 0 views

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    Collection of 138 Generative AI tools for images, text, videos, code, audio, and 3D
mikhail-miguel

GitHub Copilot · Your AI pair programmer - 0 views

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    GitHub Copilot uses the OpenAI Codex to suggest code and entire functions in real-time, right from your editor.
mikhail-miguel

Opera ("Aria") browser - 0 views

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    Opera features an integrated AI called Aria that you can access from the sidebar. You can use a keyboard shortcut (CTRL or Command and /) to start using Aria as well. The AI is also available in Opera's Android browser. The AI stems from Opera's partnership with ChatGPT creator OpenAI. Aria connects to GPT to help answer users' queries. The AI incorporates live information from the web and it can generate text or code and answer support questions regarding Opera products. In addition, Opera One can generate contextual prompts for Aria when you right click or highlighting text in the browser. If you prefer to use ChatGPT or ChatSonic, you can access those from the Opera One sidebar too. Opera says users don't have to engage with the browser's AI features if they don't want to. For one thing, you'll need to be logged into an Opera account to use Aria.
nehasaxena

Claude 3.5 Sonnet vs GPT-4o: Which is better? - 0 views

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    Claude 3.5 Sonnet vs GPT-4o: Can't decide which large language model (LLM) to supercharge your coding? We break down their strengths in efficiency to help you pick your champion! #Claude3.5SonnetvsGPT-4o #LLMshowdown #FlexibilityForProjects #AIYourPartner #ChooseYourWeapon
nehasaxena

Google Gemini's Latest Upgrade: The Future of AI - 0 views

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    Google Gemini's latest upgrade, Gemini Advanced, introduces powerful new features for enhanced image generation, custom AI experts, and improved code generation. Discover how this AI powerhouse is shaping the future of technology. #GoogleGemini #GeminiAI #AI #ArtificialIntelligence #Technology #AIupgrade #AInews
nehasaxena

Grok-2 and Grok-2 Mini: A New Era of AI - 0 views

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    Discover the latest advancements in AI with Grok-2 and Grok-2 Mini. Explore their conversational abilities, coding prowess, and potential to revolutionize various industries. #Grok2 #Grok2Mini #xAI #ElonMusk #AI #chatbot #innovation #technews
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: RoboCup Kicks Off in Singapore This Week - 1 views

  • Humans aren't the only ones playing soccer right now. In just two days, robots from world-renowned universities will compete in Singapore for RoboCup 2010. This is the other World Cup, where players range from 15-centimeter tall Wall-E-like bots to adult-sized advanced humanoids. The RoboCup, now in its 14th edition, is the world’s largest robotics and artificial intelligence competition with more than 400 teams from dozens of countries. The idea is to use the soccer bots to advance research in machine vision, multi-agent collaboration, real-time reasoning, sensor-fusion, and other areas of robotics and AI. But its participants also aim to develop autonomous soccer playing robots that will one day be able to play against humans. The RoboCup's mission statement:
Aasemoon =)

Add-ons for the RDS Simulator - Microsoft Robotics Blog - Site Home - MSDN Blogs - 0 views

  • The Robotics Developer Studio (RDS) Simulator is a key feature of the package that allows you to get started without buying expensive robots. It is a great tool for use in education. The add-ons outlined below help you to create your own simulation environments and get started on learning about robotics.
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: Robots Podcast: Distributed Flight Array - 0 views

  • You can think of the Distributed Flight Array as a combination between vertical take-off and landing vehicles, and modular reconfigurable robots. It is a flying platform consisting of multiple, autonomous, single-propeller vehicles, and these single propeller vehicles - or modules - are able to generate enough thrust to lift themselves into the air, but are completely unstable in flight, kind of like a helicopter without a tail rotor.
Aasemoon =)

Flobi: The Bielefeld Anthropomorphic Robot Head - 0 views

  • Scientists from Bielefeld University have come up with a plastic-head robot called Flobi that can express a number of different emotions, and can have it’s appearance reassembled from male to female (or vice-versa) in a couple of minutes.
Aasemoon =)

robots.net - Robots: Programmable Matter - 0 views

  • The latest episode of the Robots Podcast looks at the following scenario: Imagine being able to throw a hand-full of smart matter in a tank full of liquid and then pulling out a ready-to-use wrench once the matter has assembled. This is the vision of this episode's guests Michael Tolley and Jonas Neubert from the Computational Synthesis Laboratory run by Hod Lipson at Cornell University, NY. Tolley and Neubert give an introduction into Programmable Matter and then present their research on stochastic assembly of matter in fluid, including both simulation (see video above) and real-world implementation. Read on or tune in!
Aasemoon =)

ICT Results - Computers to read your body language? - 0 views

  • Can a computer read your body language? A consortium of European researchers thinks so, and has developed a range of innovative solutions from escalator safety to online marketing. The keyboard and mouse are no longer the only means of communicating with computers. Modern consumer devices will respond to the touch of a finger and even the spoken word, but can we go further still? Can a computer learn to make sense of how we walk and stand, to understand our gestures and even to read our facial expressions?The EU-funded MIAUCE project set out to do just that. "The motivation of the project is to put humans in the loop of interaction between the computer and their environment,” explains project coordinator Chaabane Djeraba, of CNRS in Lille. “We would like to have a form of ambient intelligence where computers are completely hidden,” he says. “This means a multimodal interface so people can interact with their environment. The computer sees their behaviour and then extracts information useful for the user."
Aasemoon =)

HRP-4C Dances Thanks to AIST's Choreonoid Software - 0 views

  • Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) has detailed the software used to make their robot dance (see some nice photos over at Pink Tentacle) in a recent press release.  The software, dubbed Choreonoid (Choreography and Humanoid), is similar to conventional computer animation software.  Users create key poses and the software automatically interpolates the motion between them.  What makes the software unique is that it also corrects the poses if they are mechanically unstable, such as modifying the position of the feet and waist, allowing anyone to create motions compatible with the ZMP balancing method.  This is especially important for robots like the HRP-4C, where complicated motions could easily cause it to fall over.
Aasemoon =)

・ARMAR-III - 1 views

  • Continuing to work on a humanoid helper robot called ARMAR, the Collaborative Research Center 588: Humanoid Robots at the University of Karlsruhe began planning ARMAR-IIIa (blue) in 2006. It has 43 degrees of freedom (torso x3, 2 arms x7, 2 hands x8, head x7) and is equipped with position, velocity, and force sensors.  The upper-body has a modular design based on the average dimensions of a person, with 14 tactile sensors per hand.  Like the previous versions, it moves on a mobile platform.  In 2008 they built a slightly upgraded version of the robot called ARMAR-IIIb (red).  Both robots use the Karlsruhe Humanoid Head, which has 2 cameras per eye (for near and far vision).  The head has a total of 7 degrees of freedom (neck x4, eyes x3), 6 microphones, and a 6D inertial sensor.
Aasemoon =)

PRODUCT HOW TO - Embedding multicore PCs for Robotics & Industrial Control | Industrial... - 0 views

  • PC-compatible industrial computers are increasing in computing power at a rapid rate due to the availability of multi-core microprocessor chips, and Microsoft Windows has become the de-facto software platform for implementing human-machine interfaces (HMIs). PCs are also becoming more reliable. With these trends, the practice of building robotic systems as complex multi-architecture, multi-platform systems is being challenged. It is now becoming possible to integrate all the functions of machine control and HMI into a single platform, without sacrificing performance and reliability of processing. Through new developments in software, we are seeing industrial systems evolving to better integrate Windows with real-time functionality such as machine vision and motion control. Software support to simplify motion control algorithm implementation already exists for the Intel processor architecture.
Aasemoon =)

IEEE Spectrum: National Instruments Introduces LabVIEW Package for Robotics Design - 0 views

  • On Monday, National Instruments announced one such platform. It's called LabView Robotics. In addition to LabView, the popular data-acquisition application, the package includes a bunch of tools specific to robotics. It can import codes in various formats (C, C++, Matlab, VHDL), offers a library of drivers for a wide variety of sensors and actuators, and has modules for implementation of real-time and embedded hardware. NI says engineers could use the package to both design and run their robotic systems. 
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