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Canal fuente @python_academy · Post #1572 · 12 ene

Делаем планировщик задач К моему удивлению, далеко не все знают про пакет schedule, который позволяет планировать задачи и повторять их через промежуток времени. Основной его плюс в том, что он максимально интуитивный и имеет гибкий функционал. А еще schedule не требует внешних зависимостей и сам в целом легковесный. Здесь на самом деле даже объяснять особо нечего, логика методов в этом пакете понятна на примерах. #python#schedule

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America 🇺🇸 News & Politics

@America · Post #10204 · 10/12/2025, 02:34

😄Schedule ➖➖➖➖➖➖ 🔘Schedule as a noun can be a plan or list of when things happen. 🔜 According to the schedule we start at 9 tomorrow. 🔘A schedule can tell when planes, trains and buses are planned to arrive at and depart from different places. 🔜The flight schedule says that we should be leaving at 1015. 🔘As a verb, schedule means to plan to for something to happen at a certain time. It’s often used in the passive to talk about when things will or should happen. 🔜The meeting was scheduled for 9:30, but everyone was late. #Schedule👨‍🏫@America ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ 🆕 Crypto News @Money 😁 Crypto Game @Egame 🇺🇸 US News @America 🇯🇵 Japan News @Japan 🇦🇪 UAE News @Dubai ▶️ Popular Movies @Videos 😜 Best Funny Video @Funnys

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America 🇺🇸 News & Politics

@America · Post #9631 · 16/09/2025, 02:45

😄Schedule ➖➖➖➖➖➖ 🔘Schedule as a noun can be a plan or list of when things happen. 🔜 According to the schedule we start at 9 tomorrow. 🔘A schedule can tell when planes, trains and buses are planned to arrive at and depart from different places. 🔜The flight schedule says that we should be leaving at 1015. 🔘As a verb, schedule means to plan to for something to happen at a certain time. It’s often used in the passive to talk about when things will or should happen. 🔜The meeting was scheduled for 9:30, but everyone was late. #Schedule👨‍🏫@America ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖ 🆕 Crypto News @Money 😁 Crypto Game @Egame 🇺🇸 US News @America 🇯🇵 Japan News @Japan 🇦🇪 UAE News @Dubai ▶️ Popular Movies @Videos 😜 Best Funny Video @Funnys

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Doniyor Olimjonov English | IELTS

@doniyorieltss · Post #1884 · 28/01/2024, 17:58

IELTS BAND8.5+ #Schedule ✅A - READING! Make sure that you spend at least 1 hour a day on the following (don’t forget to record vocab, underline useful collocations, copy them into your vocab book... if you have one): ✅ B - WATCHING Don't watch your content passively with the video/radio etc. playing in the background. You need to listen attentively since you'll need to do the same in the exam. Train your ear at an early stage and make life easier for yourself down the line. Oh, and if watching something.... subtitles OFF! 1 hour a day, too. 📆 MONDAY 📖National Geographic: select THEMES and randomly read an article whether science, travel, adventure, animals etc. 💻Documentary: think about what you might have read and type the theme into YouTube 📆 TUESDAY 📖Time Magazine: click the box top left next to TIME and randomly read an article whether politics, business, tech, health etc. 💻YouTube Videos: I have put together a number of YouTube channels I enjoy in a post. 📆WEDNESDAY 📖 The Guardian: Randomly select different themes and select an article at random to read 💻BBC World service is a good one. Loads of different themes for background listening: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/live:bbc_world_serv.. 📆THURSDAY 📖Scientific American : randomly select a news article to read. 💻 Documentary: Curiosity Stream is a good one, but it's a paid website. 📆FRIDAY (Entertainment) 📖 Continue reading a book of your choice PROVIDING it’s not a classic (continue with that after your course) 💻 Watch a film of your choice but still have pen and paper ready! Subtitles off!!! 📆SATURDAYS AND SUNDAYS Focus on doing your grammar and vocab exercises, practice tests as well as go over the vocab and things you have recorded during the week. Use the weekend to write your essays. My guidelines: 📌 It doesn't matter if you're interested in the themes or not. In the exam you don't have a choice. So stop being selective. Move beyond Friends and The Big Bang Theory. 📌 Record "chunks of language". Once you've done the article or video, summarize it out aloud recycling that language you have just jotted down. Maybe even write a small summary. 📌 Less is more! Do one article or video a day. That's enough. Better do one, learn and recycle the language rather than watch/read too many and remember nothing. ⚡️@ieltsulugbeks⚡️

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Doniyor Olimjonov English | IELTS

@doniyorieltss · Post #703 · 30/01/2023, 15:16

IELTS BAND8.5+ #Schedule ✅A - READING! Make sure that you spend at least 1 hour a day on the following (don’t forget to record vocab, underline useful collocations, copy them into your vocab book... if you have one): ✅ B - WATCHING Don't watch your content passively with the video/radio etc. playing in the background. You need to listen attentively since you'll need to do the same in the exam. Train your ear at an early stage and make life easier for yourself down the line. Oh, and if watching something.... subtitles OFF! 1 hour a day, too. 📆 MONDAY 📖National Geographic: select THEMES and randomly read an article whether science, travel, adventure, animals etc. 💻Documentary: think about what you might have read and type the theme into YouTube 📆 TUESDAY 📖Time Magazine: click the box top left next to TIME and randomly read an article whether politics, business, tech, health etc. 💻YouTube Videos: I have put together a number of YouTube channels I enjoy in a post. 📆WEDNESDAY 📖 The Guardian: Randomly select different themes and select an article at random to read 💻BBC World service is a good one. Loads of different themes for background listening: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/live:bbc_world_serv.. 📆THURSDAY 📖Scientific American : randomly select a news article to read. 💻 Documentary: Curiosity Stream is a good one, but it's a paid website. 📆FRIDAY (Entertainment) 📖 Continue reading a book of your choice PROVIDING it’s not a classic (continue with that after your course) 💻 Watch a film of your choice but still have pen and paper ready! Subtitles off!!! 📆SATURDAYS AND SUNDAYS Focus on doing your grammar and vocab exercises, practice tests as well as go over the vocab and things you have recorded during the week. Use the weekend to write your essays. My guidelines: 📌 It doesn't matter if you're interested in the themes or not. In the exam you don't have a choice. So stop being selective. Move beyond Friends and The Big Bang Theory. 📌 Record "chunks of language". Once you've done the article or video, summarize it out aloud recycling that language you have just jotted down. Maybe even write a small summary. 📌 Less is more! Do one article or video a day. That's enough. Better do one, learn and recycle the language rather than watch/read too many and remember nothing. ⚡️@ieltsulugbeks⚡️

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Doniyor Olimjonov English | IELTS

@doniyorieltss · Post #561 · 22/01/2023, 17:26

IELTS BAND8.5+ #Schedule ✅A - READING! Make sure that you spend at least 1 hour a day on the following (don’t forget to record vocab, underline useful collocations, copy them into your vocab book... if you have one): ✅ B - WATCHING Don't watch your content passively with the video/radio etc. playing in the background. You need to listen attentively since you'll need to do the same in the exam. Train your ear at an early stage and make life easier for yourself down the line. Oh, and if watching something.... subtitles OFF! 1 hour a day, too. 📆 MONDAY 📖National Geographic: select THEMES and randomly read an article whether science, travel, adventure, animals etc. 💻Documentary: think about what you might have read and type the theme into YouTube 📆 TUESDAY 📖Time Magazine: click the box top left next to TIME and randomly read an article whether politics, business, tech, health etc. 💻YouTube Videos: I have put together a number of YouTube channels I enjoy in a post. 📆WEDNESDAY 📖 The Guardian: Randomly select different themes and select an article at random to read 💻BBC World service is a good one. Loads of different themes for background listening: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/live:bbc_world_serv.. 📆THURSDAY 📖Scientific American : randomly select a news article to read. 💻 Documentary: Curiosity Stream is a good one, but it's a paid website. 📆FRIDAY (Entertainment) 📖 Continue reading a book of your choice PROVIDING it’s not a classic (continue with that after your course) 💻 Watch a film of your choice but still have pen and paper ready! Subtitles off!!! 📆SATURDAYS AND SUNDAYS Focus on doing your grammar and vocab exercises, practice tests as well as go over the vocab and things you have recorded during the week. Use the weekend to write your essays. My guidelines: 📌 It doesn't matter if you're interested in the themes or not. In the exam you don't have a choice. So stop being selective. Move beyond Friends and The Big Bang Theory. 📌 Record "chunks of language". Once you've done the article or video, summarize it out aloud recycling that language you have just jotted down. Maybe even write a small summary. 📌 Less is more! Do one article or video a day. That's enough. Better do one, learn and recycle the language rather than watch/read too many and remember nothing. ⚡️@ieltsulugbeks⚡️

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GitHub Trends

@githubtrending · Post #15623 · 16/04/2026, 12:00

#python DFlash is a lightweight block diffusion model that speeds up large language models like Qwen3.5 and Llama through speculative decoding, generating draft tokens in parallel for over 6x faster inference with no quality loss—up to 2.5x better than top methods. It supports easy integration with vLLM, SGLang, Transformers, or MLX via simple installs and commands, with ready models on Hugging Face. You benefit by running quicker AI generation on your hardware, boosting throughput to ~430 tokens/second and GPU use over 90% for efficient tasks like math or coding. https://github.com/z-lab/dflash

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GitHub Trends

@githubtrending · Post #15606 · 06/04/2026, 12:30

#python PersonaPlex is a real-time speech model for natural, low-latency conversations. Control its voice with audio prompts and role via simple text—like a friendly teacher, customer service rep, or casual chat partner—with natural male/female voices. Install easily, launch a web demo server, and test offline. You benefit by creating personalized AI interactions for apps, role-play, or fun talks, with quick setup and low GPU needs via CPU offload. https://github.com/NVIDIA/personaplex

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GitHub Trends

@githubtrending · Post #15590 · 27/03/2026, 11:30

#python AI Scientist-v2 is an autonomous AI system that generates research ideas, runs experiments, analyzes data, and writes full scientific papers using agentic tree search—no human templates needed. It produced the first entirely AI-written paper accepted via peer review at an ICLR workshop. You benefit by quickly exploring ML topics, automating discovery to save time and costs (about $20 per run on Linux with GPU), and scaling your research productivity for faster breakthroughs. Install via conda, set API keys, ideate with a Markdown file, then launch experiments. Run in a safe sandbox due to code risks. https://github.com/SakanaAI/AI-Scientist-v2

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GitHub Trends

@githubtrending · Post #15560 · 14/03/2026, 12:00

#python Dimensional OS (DimOS) is a simple Python-based operating system for robots like quadrupeds, humanoids, drones, and arms from Unitree, Xarm, and more—no ROS needed. Install easily with one command, run simulations or real hardware, and use natural language like "explore the room" for agent control with navigation, perception, spatial memory, and multi-agent systems. You benefit by quickly building and testing advanced robot apps locally, saving time and enabling seamless hardware integration without complex setups. https://github.com/dimensionalOS/dimos

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GitHub Trends

@githubtrending · Post #15555 · 12/03/2026, 12:00

#python OpenRAG is an intelligent document search platform that combines three powerful open-source tools—Docling, OpenSearch, and Langflow—to transform your documents into an AI-powered knowledge system. You upload files of any format (PDFs, Word documents, images, audio), and the system intelligently parses and indexes them for semantic search. Then you chat with your documents through a simple interface, getting accurate answers backed by relevant sources. The benefit is that you get enterprise-grade document retrieval and AI conversations ready to use immediately, without building complex systems from scratch, while maintaining full control over how documents are processed and searched. https://github.com/langflow-ai/openrag

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GitHub Trends

@githubtrending · Post #15544 · 06/03/2026, 12:30

#python Webnovel Writer is a free Claude Code plugin for creating long web novels. It reduces AI forgetting and errors with smart RAG tools, letting you init projects (/webnovel-init), plan plots (/webnovel-plan), write chapters (/webnovel-write), review (1-5), and view dashboards. Install via marketplace, add Python deps, set API keys, and use commands easily. Benefits: Saves time on consistent long stories, boosts creativity for serials, and tracks progress without manual fixes—perfect for steady novel output. https://github.com/lingfengQAQ/webnovel-writer

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GitHub Trends

@githubtrending · Post #15540 · 05/03/2026, 12:00

#python SEO Machine is a Claude Code tool for businesses to easily create long SEO blog posts. Use commands like /research for keyword and competitor analysis, /write for 2000+ word optimized articles in your brand voice, /rewrite to update old content, and /optimize for final SEO scores (0-100). It integrates Google Analytics, Search Console, and DataForSEO for real data, plus agents for meta tags, links, and readability. Customize with your brand files for perfect fit. You save hours on research/writing, get higher Google rankings, more traffic, and content that converts readers to customers. https://github.com/TheCraigHewitt/seomachine

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