May 15 2022, 18:17

Happy woofday, Yuki! One year. We gifted him a piece of a tree branch (for ten bucks), a plastic piece resembling a tree branch in appearance and smell (also for ten bucks), and a real bone. Today he darted between all three, not knowing which to choose. And in the evening, we went to Morven Park in the pouring rain, just to keep life from seeming too sweet.

May 11 2022, 20:08

Wildly interesting lectures for general knowledge about the history of the development of the atomic bomb by Mark Solonin. With a plethora of technical details, explained in an ELI5 style. Here, it’s not just about the atomic bomb, but generally about the path to the atomic industry, with its problems and solutions. And about the bomb as well. Mark’s entire channel is fascinating, primarily aimed at grown boys.

May 08 2022, 14:36

Just finished reading Life’s Edge by Carl Zimmer. It was the third book of Zimmer I’ve read. Some time ago I decided to read books only aloud. The first book was Harry Potter, a few years ago. Reading aloud helped me stop jumping between paragraphs and resist the temptation to skip boring parts. It also helped me to keep a constant reading speed (which is just 2:20 min per page). I was able to see how the pauses in speech match the punctuation and structure of written sentences. And it helped to start thinking in phrases and word combinations rather than in separate words and grammar rules. It helped to draw attention to how the sentences are built — from time to time it was against my understanding of English grammar (and I googled why and patched my understanding as a result).

These 290 pages took me about 6.5 hours (2:20 per page). I bought the book on Apr, 8, exactly one month ago. On average, it was taking about 15 minutes per day.

I found the book really interesting, but if one has to choose which Zimmer’s to read, then it is better to start with his previous book, “She Has Her Mother’s Laugh: The Powers, Perversions, and Potential of Heredity” (2018). “The Planet of Viruses” (2015) was interesting too.

I recorded how I was reading one of the last pages of the book. Since I had never seen that page before, it was not as smooth as it could be. Have you heard my Russian accent? Have you heard my rolling “r”? Interesting to hear some feedback and recommendations from those for whom English is the first language.

May 07 2022, 21:13

I discovered an excellent app for iOS: PiPifier. It’s a Safari extension that enables the use of every HTML5 video in Picture in Picture mode — including Youtube videos which typically don’t support this feature. PiP allows you to listen to or watch Youtube music in the background. It continues to play even if you exit Safari or the Youtube App. Normally, playing in the background is a premium feature (part of Youtube Music). I listen to Youtube while driving, so the background play is tremendously useful.

May 05 2022, 00:59

I always thought I can explain how anything in the world is built, at least to some extent. I always believed that I understood how machine learning functions. I was even developing a chess recognition app which operated effectively. However, the latest updates from this field are truly astonishing. I cannot explain how the trained models can produce such remarkable results.

Look, this model deciphers jokes and unravels narratives. I feel as though I am being deceived. It’s too astonishing to be authentic.

P.s. DALL-E 2 is already impressive

as it generates realistic images and artwork from a description in natural language.

May 04 2022, 20:29

Today I learned that there is Cebuano Wikipedia which has over 6 million articles, making Cebuano the foreign language after English with the most content on the wiki. Most of the articles were created by the bot called Ljsbot. Most of these are machine-translated articles with little to no quality control but still 🙂 6.5M articles – just a bit fewer articles than English. Sverker Johansson has got a great achievement point in his CV.

Also I found that there is a most published author named Philip Parker. He has published over 85,000 books, each of which is completed in less than an hour using algorithms. Parker published the automated books through Icon Group International, using several Icon group subheadings. Most of Parker’s automatically generated books target niche markets such as medicine. Example — the books can be bought on Amazon 😉

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lsjbot.

https://worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n88-265944/

May 04 2022, 09:01

This is a cedar-apple rust fungus (кедрово-яблочный гниющий гриб). Just photographed it after rain poured down all night. After the rain, the fungus turns orange and shows its swollen spore-bearing horns. Before the rain, while it grows, it resembles a coronavirus, a ball of reddish-brown cones with spikes (see the photograph in the comments). The botanical name is Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae.

May 04 2022, 09:01

This is a cedar-apple rust fungus (кедрово-яблочный гниющий гриб). Just photographed it after rain poured down all night. After the rain, the fungus turns orange and shows its swollen spore-bearing horns. Before the rain, while it grows, it resembles a coronavirus, a ball of reddish-brown cones with spikes (see the photograph in the comments). The botanical name is Gymnosporangium juniperi-virginianae.