I have some things you can do with it for people who are getting into it newly:
- Find sheet music for a wide variety of composers and genres, from Bach to Bartok.
- Info about composers, including biographies, bibliographies, and discographies.
- Info about musical works, including instrumentation, duration, and historical background.
- A discussion forum
They also post updates on their blogs on whats new
Also you can access it through an API as well
If you dont really have budget constraint. You could try compressing the transcript by sending it few sentences at once. You would need some sort of dependency parsing to check for the splits. Ask GPT to compress it. Keep doing that till you are under 8k tokens. Finally input the overall compressed transcript.
Man, the Boston Globe is way too expensive, but I'm still subscribed. After the marathon bombing, it hit me how crucial it is to have local reporters who aren't just on TV. Even though they get on my nerves sometimes, I keep shelling out the cash. I've lived in places where the last real paper shut down, and it's a massive loss that never gets replaced.
Yeah, while all the other stuff is important, prompts are a big deal, especially for generative image tasks. They need to be just right for the checkpoint, but if you nail it, you can get an awesome image straight away. Sadly, most people just give up too quickly.
But with ChatGPT, even if you give it a terrible prompt, it can still "get" what you're trying to say. You can keep chatting until you get the image you want. It's way easier than with Txt2img, which can be pretty unforgiving.
And those courses? Total scam, don't bother with them.
I remember looking into this article. It was really helpful for me to understand transformers. Although the OP's article is detailed, this one is concise. Here's the link: https://blue-season.github.io/transformer-in-5-minutes
I feel OpenSSH is more powerful overall. Its cryptographic key management allows users to generate and manage keys securely which useful for larger organisations, where managing a large number of keys can be challenging.
I think the ability to sell and close deals is the most critical skill set for early-stage company CEOs. I have noticed technical founders generally lack experience in customer-facing roles or closing deals will need to acquire these skills. I think you should possess a natural instinct for strategy, motivating people, and garnering investment in your ideas from others.
It's easy to fall into the trap of relying on rote memorization of integration rules, but problems like (⋆) force students to truly understand the concepts behind the math.
I don't think that's true. Floor is a piecewise function, so you follow the rule for integrating piecewise functions and break it into a sum of integrals of each piece, then follow the rules for those (they're all basically the same, so you don't need to do 1000 of them). You don't need to think about periodic functions at all.
> You don't need to think about periodic functions at all.
except you just described that which is called period...so it's actually good for a student to notice these things, and use the correct term, so that they can associate the name with the idea.
I don't think many would notice doing it that way, as it's disguised by the different limits and constant factors. The indefinite integrals are what is basically the same on the surface. There's more to periodicity than different sections being similar on the surface, and there's certainly no need for them to use the correct terms.
Mine did the same and charged for bundles of HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+
Until recently they reverted it after bunch of complains and tonnes of people changing their ISP
I love the video game support, but I have concerns about the 'proper name' requirement for movies. It would require me to reorganize my entire library and lose a lot of information that other apps use. Also, the lack of subdirectories for organizing books is a limitation for those with large libraries. Overall, it seems like your app is targeted towards users with small, non-automated libraries, and the organizational requirements may prevent some people from using it
They also post updates on their blogs on whats new Also you can access it through an API as well