#shell
Try is a simple Ruby tool that organizes your coding experiments in one folder like ~/src/tries, using fuzzy search to quickly find or create dated directories (e.g., 2025-01-18-redis-test). Install via `gem install try-cli` or curl the single file, then add `eval "$(try init)"` to your shell—no setup needed. It ranks recent projects highest with smart matching, so you avoid scattered "test" folders and lost /tmp work. This saves time jumping between ideas, keeping your chaotic projects instantly accessible and productive.
https://github.com/tobi/try
#DL
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Zeus New Pytorch Ecosystem Tool
Zeus is an open source toolkit for measuring and optimizing power consumption of deep learning workloads.
🖥Github
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Main channel: @repo_science
Coupons: @freecoupons_reposcience
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#dl
Park, Chanwook, Sourav Saha, Jiachen Guo, Hantao Zhang, Xiaoyu Xie, Miguel A. Bessa, Dong Qian, et al. 2025. “Unifying Machine Learning and Interpolation Theory via Interpolating Neural Networks.” Nature Communications 16 (1): 1–12.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-63790-8
#dl
A few cool ideas in this model.
Introducing Gemma 3n: The developer guide - Google Developers Blog
https://developers.googleblog.com/en/introducing-gemma-3n-developer-guide/
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There is this new lib called scale. One could compile CUDA code to use it on AMD GPU.
https://docs.scale-lang.com/manual/how-to-use/
I don't know who is more pissed off, NVidia or AMD.
#dl
This repo is really nice.
yuanchenyang/smalldiffusion: Simple and readable code for training and sampling from diffusion models
https://github.com/yuanchenyang/smalldiffusion
#dl
Google & USC benchmarked a prompt based forecasting method, and the results are amazing.
Cao D, Jia F, Arik SO, Pfister T, Zheng Y, Ye W, et al. TEMPO: Prompt-based Generative Pre-trained Transformer for time series forecasting. arXiv [cs.LG]. 2023. Available: http://arxiv.org/abs/2310.04948