Ask HN: Full-on machine learning for 2020, what are the best resources? https://t.co/enmeHnUrAb
— Hacker News 200 (@newsyc200) January 1, 2020
from Twitter https://twitter.com/newsyc200
December 31, 2019 at 08:19PM
via IFTTT
Ask HN: Full-on machine learning for 2020, what are the best resources? https://t.co/enmeHnUrAb
— Hacker News 200 (@newsyc200) January 1, 2020
10 years ago, BlackBerry had 42% market share of smartphones, Microsoft had 18% and Palm had 6%. Today, combined they have ~0% market share and no one even thinks about them. Things can change fast. https://t.co/tns2h7CWBR
— Sheel Mohnot (@pitdesi) January 1, 2020
Taking a cue from @stevenkane I decided to look back at the decade not the year this new year's eve. Will do the same and look forward at the 2020s tomorrow. https://t.co/nKE4q3Hizz
— Fred Wilson (@fredwilson) December 31, 2019
I keep raving about @AirMailWeekly as one of my favorite finds of 2019. Here's some of their work that I have loved.
— Sriram Krishnan (@sriramk) December 31, 2019
The château that ate Provence -> https://t.co/M1Ba5X2EJm
The mind of Boris Johnson -> https://t.co/Hu4NaqOQTa
On Prince Andrew -> https://t.co/rlOAcQMFkl
There is SOO much time/research/knowledge tucked behind this video by @withfries2 @a16z. It's amazing we live in an era where anyone can watch and learn for free!
— Mitchell Cohen (@MitchellLandon) December 31, 2019
https://t.co/H2qv97qQ13
Really cool article in @PNASNews by @oferon, @lucas_c_parra, @daltonconley and others shows how smart mechanism design, here derived from biology (!), can help improve information quality for participatory governance: https://t.co/pEiVXQY5Ro I thought of @audreyt
— (((E. Glen Weyl))) (@glenweyl) December 30, 2019
Here is the best of what we wrote in 2019:https://t.co/YOS395fHGk
— Farnam Street (@farnamstreet) December 30, 2019
1/ Esports Industry Predictions for 2020:https://t.co/vwoyvRvTwz pic.twitter.com/zleHIznmCE
— Blake Robbins (@blakeir) December 31, 2019
Retailers grapple with $100bn returns problem - ‘returns for women’s clothes are 50% and half of those have no salvage value’ https://t.co/ntSZn35gyM
— Benedict Evans (@benedictevans) December 31, 2019
2000 customers @ $39/month is almost $1M/year.
— Daniel Vassallo (@dvassallo) December 31, 2019
- You don't need to dominate the market.
- You don't need to disrupt anything.
- You don't need to conquer the competition.
You can add 1 new customer/day & before you know it, you'll have a $1M/yr machine. Wouldn't that be enough?
I made a huge list of blockchain games currently in development that have potential to grow big time in 2020. Tried to refrain from mentioning idle RPGs and clickers, simply because I wanted traditional active gameplay. https://t.co/JgzcKWaple #blockchaingames #gamedev pic.twitter.com/neaTXv5N7a
— nederob.eth - Ro₿ert Hoogendoorn (@Nederob) December 30, 2019
New tutorial!🚀
— Adrian Rosebrock (@PyImageSearch) December 30, 2019
Improve your #DeepLearning model accuracy with "label smoothing":
- Super easy to implement
- Better generalization
- Includes #Keras and #TensorFlow 2.0 source codehttps://t.co/bzrXQeEbHx 👍#MachineLearning #ArtificialIntelligence #AI #DataScience pic.twitter.com/28Sc2PoFDe
Spent this morning filling in some of the (many) gaps in my knowledge and wanted to share appreciation for @3blue1brown’s videos. He does such a great job of distilling a topic to its essence https://t.co/b2ZA0JZ1gJ
— Shivon Zilis (@shivon) December 30, 2019
New Years resolution fulfilled:
— Rene Pickhardt (@renepickhardt) December 30, 2019
I finished 2019 as the 3rd highest ranked user behind @achow101 & @pwuille and I rank 32nd over all time on https://t.co/I1S6JUbvEm
Huge interest in #LightningNetwork
Besides writing Mastering Lighting what resolution should I go for in 2020? https://t.co/vk4LSLmBrC pic.twitter.com/Z4aUOTRCWM
Computer Science from the Bottom Up (2016) https://t.co/muWveTEPf3 (https://t.co/oNWsTs91E6)
— Hacker News 200 (@newsyc200) December 29, 2019
2019 Reading List (1 of 2)
— Jamie Quint (@jamiequint) December 29, 2019
The Complacent Class
The Slow Death of Europe
The Forgotten Man
Setting the Table
What You Do Is Who You Are
Boyd
The Madness of Crowds
Billion Dollar Whale
The Score Takes Care of Itself
The History of Unilever - Book 1
The Revolt of the People
Our top 5 crypto posts of the year include deep dives on crypto and blockchain definitions, regulations, and applications -- 👇https://t.co/NxS1VH6iZz
— a16z (@a16z) December 28, 2019
featuring @katie_haun @cdixon @kevinchou @apruden08 @ali01 @withfries2 @smc90
The next era of financial services will come from unexpected places, and more from our top 10 fintech posts of the year, featuring @astrange, @illscience, @arampell, @rexsalisbury, @seema_amble👇 https://t.co/x9vDEDF5xC
— a16z (@a16z) December 27, 2019
Our top 10 consumer tech posts of the year 👇 https://t.co/0lJV8Tr4xi
— a16z (@a16z) December 27, 2019
includes company building, emerging trends, market maps, and more from @jeff_jordan, @andrewchen, @conniechan, @lijin18, @dcoolican, @tocelot, @avesegal, @btcarroccio
Still slowly making my way through this year's NeurIPS talks. Esp like to stumble by good talks from slightly different areas, e.g. tonight liked "ML Meets Single-Cell Biology" https://t.co/lbdPmdVYoL Incredible that we're mapping out cell state markov chains for tissues. pic.twitter.com/eJcCC2AGDB
— Andrej Karpathy (@karpathy) December 28, 2019
1/ 5 favorite books from 2019. 2 on the human/science, 1 business book and 2 sci-fi.
— immad (@immad) December 27, 2019
The Beginning of Infinity by David Deutsch.
Thought provoking book about the potential of humanity.
1/ Favorite books from 2019:
— Jonathan Swanson (@swaaanson) December 26, 2019
-Nexus (best sci fi💊)
-Churchill: A Life (best biography🇬🇧)
-Accidental Superpower (best geopolitics🌎)
-The Party (best China🇨🇳)
-The Grand Design (best physics⚡️)
-Elephant in the Brain (best neuroscience🧠)
-Rise and Kill First (best jaw drop😱)
I marvel at the innovative ways scientists engineer to see + read biology 👇 https://t.co/GqWdiAP5Br
— Jorge Conde (@JorgeCondeBio) December 27, 2019
When sending money is the most powerful tool you have in a relief effort, how do you ensure it gets to the right people? In Iraq, former U.S. Army officer @apruden08 discovered it’s not always easy to track where the money goes. https://t.co/RfqEXHx178 pic.twitter.com/DzgWFtpzHZ
— a16z (@a16z) December 26, 2019
Make up your own damn mind about how hard you should work. I’ve met happy & successful people with vastly different work styles.
— Bobby Goodlatte (@rsg) December 26, 2019
Just don’t let virtue-signalers on Twitter influence your decision either way. Especially those whose “hustle” is to tweet all the time about hustling
Here are some of the most interesting books, ideas, and thinkers I explored, went deep on — and that, as a result, changed my mind — in 2019:
— Erik Torenberg (@eriktorenberg) December 26, 2019
Thread 👇
Takeaways from coaching over a hundred CEOs, founders and VCs this year https://t.co/pkth509pzE (https://t.co/MWN6sbOvsi)
— Hacker News 200 (@newsyc200) December 26, 2019
"It is politically more powerful to say that you are going to stick it to the other side. The milder speech, that says that no one is bad and we will not oppress anyone, has less power." https://t.co/FcVw4cyt5o
— Bonnie Kavoussi (@bkavoussi) December 26, 2019
Cars evolved to drive around without a destination. Rewarded for distance but penalized for collisions.
— hardmaru (@hardmaru) December 25, 2019
(Demo from 2014) → https://t.co/kBfqxmLwuR pic.twitter.com/cCHRUPE8GP
Beautiful Seattle Sunset today pic.twitter.com/HIV0eyiCxC
— Gopi Vikranth (@GopiVikranth) December 26, 2019
7/ 1994 was a year of huge change.
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) December 25, 2019
"The decision to put money into the Internet in 1994 was considered by many of my colleagues to be borderline insane. Most people said things like, The Internet is free; you can’t make money on that!" Jim Clark https://t.co/De7mNCczSZ
130-page #MachineLearning cheat sheet with classical equations & diagrams, to assist in preparation for job interviews or quick recall of #ML knowledge and ideas: https://t.co/DRcWhBFAN4 (PDF, plus LaTeX source)
— Kirk Borne (@KirkDBorne) December 25, 2019
———#BigData #DataScience #AI #DeepLearning #Algorithms #Mathematics pic.twitter.com/NC18lhBNt2
How does CFIUS and FIRRMA affect U.S. companies taking investments from, or doing joint ventures with, foreign entities - or just doing business globally in general? @katie_haun interviewed expert @mikeleiter to get answers for tech founders in particular:https://t.co/XWXSpqmWM8
— a16z (@a16z) December 24, 2019
An inspiring manifesto from Founders Fund about building the future! Worth reading https://t.co/l53u1BTfWx
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) December 24, 2019
One of many questions from Star Wars:TROS: why didn't JJ's attempt to recreate the Avengers:Endgame "portals" scene or LOTR's Rohirrim work? The response was pretty muted in my theater.
— Sriram Krishnan (@sriramk) December 23, 2019
My best theory - we never knew/connected with the rescuers as we did in the Endgame version.
"Tony Fadell (@tfadell) — On Building the iPod, iPhone, Nest, and a Life of Curiosity"
— Tim Ferriss (@tferriss) December 24, 2019
Apple Podcasts: https://t.co/fHjZ1UupSx
Spotify: https://t.co/S5wl6SP69R
Overcast: https://t.co/5wdDqddjOc
Show notes: https://t.co/qgXLKPt8An
“At @IDEO, we treasure these moments of cross-industry learning. Sometimes all it takes is for leaders & frontline workers to get out from beyond their desks & see things from a new perspective.”
— IDEO U (@IDEOU) December 24, 2019
Feeling stuck? Seek inspiration outside your comfort zone. https://t.co/bTJ8fDp4UZ
The big ideas we at @a16z hope fintech tackles in 2020👇
— Rex Salisbury (@rexsalisbury) December 24, 2019
1️⃣Selling products, selling ads...selling fintech?
2️⃣The most exciting thing? Infrastructure
3️⃣The resurgence of B2B marketplaces
4️⃣Taking on the housing crisis
5️⃣Automating the CFO suitehttps://t.co/03MVrYHDx6
The Infinite Gift 🎁
— Fermat's Library (@fermatslibrary) December 24, 2019
This is an interesting object where the side of the nth box is 1/√n. As n→+∞, the gift has infinite surface area and length but finite volume!
Learn more about this interesting paradox here: https://t.co/jbWbg6iqFZ pic.twitter.com/kxO20PTGti
Haters wept.
— Balaji S. Srinivasan (@balajis) December 24, 2019
So hard to just make electric cars even work at all...
...let alone to do it while running SpaceX, co-founding Boring and Neuralink, and fighting off shorts and trolls
He’ll get us to Mars yet.https://t.co/1hZ9uhQTH7
My favorite thread of this year
— 〈 Berger |🎄| Dillon 〉 (@InertialObservr) December 24, 2019
How was the Higgs Boson discovered? https://t.co/PFTSNGb5Vn
Stock returns in past decade vs Bitcoin
— Jason A. Williams 🦍 (@JWilliamsFstmed) December 23, 2019
Netflix: +4,177%
Amazon: +1,787%
Mastercard: +1,126%
Apple: +966%
Visa: +824%
Starbucks: +800%
Salesforce: +792%
Adobe: +790%
Nike: +587%
Microsoft: +556%
Costco: +542%
Disney: +423%
Google: +335%
McDonald’s: +325%
Bitcoin is up 70,000x
Facebook: Mobile gaming is going tribal and global https://t.co/pl2CtN1ivG
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 23, 2019
The phrase “the future of work” continues to increase in popularity. However, the term’s definition remains ambiguous. Mercedes Bent, parter at Greenspring manager @lightspeedvp breaks down what the future might hold for workers here: https://t.co/WLNuErf0Qg
— Greenspring (@GreenspringVC) December 22, 2019
What to expect from car hackers in 2020 and beyond https://t.co/9u5m2NWKtu by Yossi Vardi
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 22, 2019
A six year old London girl starts writing her Christmas cards - and discovers a message from a Chinese gulag. An astonishing splash for the paper tonight. pic.twitter.com/onRaV5GmDI
— Tony Allen-Mills (@TAMinUK) December 21, 2019
'Snow Crash' inspired the metaverse, and now it's becoming an HBO show https://t.co/ZGPN5nxwLw by @UploadVR
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 22, 2019
A bit of a long read but a good one. Do your mind a favor.
— Ben Bajarin (@BenBajarin) December 21, 2019
Also, for the cognitive challenging sport I suggest take up tennis. Best overall body sport that includes a heavy dose of strategy.
Why Your Brain Needs Exercise - Scientific American https://t.co/hgxkRm9iy9
“Design represents a fundamental shift in competitive advantage. Ten-plus years ago it was all about the code. Now it will be about the elegance of design as a first principle of software development.” --a16z's Peter Levine on "The Decade of Design"https://t.co/lo5VuFrswW
— a16z (@a16z) December 21, 2019
1/2) These quotes from Hal Finney's 1992 "electronic banking" proposal illustrate what a visionary he really was.
— Tuur Demeester (@TuurDemeester) December 21, 2019
His questions arguably foreshadow native digital cash, privacy, PoW mining, predetermined money supply, and competing cryptocurrencies.https://t.co/pL7xVWrHq4 pic.twitter.com/X9JKhMwSye
For the Holidays - two new drops from me! First:
— Matthew Ball (@ballmatthew) December 21, 2019
"11 Lessons from the Success of Disney+"
---
For all of Disney’s success in the media industry and with Disney+, its SVOD lessons are remarkably conventional and broadly applicablehttps://t.co/ptCQQAgTei
Mathematics Free and Open-Source Textbooks https://t.co/FSzby6XDQ5 (https://t.co/gVGXqbchNR)
— Hacker News 200 (@newsyc200) December 21, 2019
Facebook: Mobile gaming is going tribal and global https://t.co/NFZIIjrwjc by @deantak
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 21, 2019
Finland is making its online AI crash course free to the world https://t.co/wpjFcWUuJO pic.twitter.com/ePsewg7807
— The Verge (@verge) December 21, 2019
This is Champernowne’s constant. It is transcendental (Mahler 1961) and normal in base 10 (Bailey and Crandall 2002), meaning that each digit 0 to 9 occurs 10% of the time. pic.twitter.com/7GExueebda
— Fermat's Library (@fermatslibrary) December 21, 2019
“With the advent of Bitcoin, we saw a major governmental lever begin to dissolve. The follow-on effects are not yet obvious.” @PhilJBonello https://t.co/ml8cMlZHYP
— Larry Salibra (@larrysalibra) December 21, 2019
NASA has shared a stunning visualization of the forces at work around black holes. https://t.co/EtDsSSjPHW
— Futurism (@futurism) December 21, 2019
"The name of the game is how low you can go in terms of customer acquisition cost (CAC). That's the battle between these originators.
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) December 21, 2019
[Cross River] provides access to payment routes and compliance modules to anybody who wants to be in that business." https://t.co/cOKTgaMDeh
This is a super important investigative piece from @AntoineGara. Some fin-tech startups, particularly those in lending, are very tricky to execute & analyze. Any time you time-shift cash flows, it makes unit economics very difficult to analyze. I am sure @trengriffin can opine. https://t.co/vf6TJpRfoN
— Bill Gurley (@bgurley) December 20, 2019
Here's my favorite games of the year. In reality, this matters to no one except me. But since I spent so much time writing it and agonizing over it, you guys have to read it. https://t.co/DCO0joxOxb
— Dean Takahashi (@deantak) December 20, 2019
Several people asked which essays are my favorites:https://t.co/yFNe1NW55Bhttps://t.co/HdUSjESNGlhttps://t.co/ASjOx0YHUuhttps://t.co/XNW3ov6yXQhttps://t.co/Ww2vBKYMt9https://t.co/GQ6IECES02https://t.co/jOQbXXji14https://t.co/52xghlUODRhttps://t.co/oMGkyfOQ4H
— Paul Graham (@paulg) December 20, 2019
The art of joining wooden pieces without nails or glue pic.twitter.com/yKYq8VElxn
— Vala Afshar (@ValaAfshar) December 20, 2019
There's a lot to write about. Radio frequencies, antennas, satellites, rocket launches, regulation, finance, business models, intersatellite links, semiconductors, and more. It's easier to list tech businesses that aren't involved than are these days.https://t.co/aiLtOYum5z
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) December 20, 2019
A year ago today, we were almost out of money. We had a consulting client who owed us ~$450k, but was trying to negotiate down on the amount, despite work being fully delivered in September. Then, "the holidays" hit.
— Kristen Anderson (@CatchKristen) December 20, 2019
1/
The rise of AI in B2B is more than a trend, rather it is a paradigm shift in industries and how enterprises operate. @bhorowitz of @a16z shares his prediction for systems of record https://t.co/9qmj0sTzps pic.twitter.com/oFlEcqqCbx
— Oleg R (@OlegR) December 19, 2019
A deeply reported and compelling read from @KYWeise about how sellers become dependent on Amazon and then they start turning the vise. Part of our Amazon series. https://t.co/TrX1rmZcnr
— Daisuke Wakabayashi (@daiwaka) December 19, 2019
This is why @usainbolt has the 100m World Record pic.twitter.com/CGsfBfW0hX
— Vala Afshar (@ValaAfshar) December 19, 2019
The a16z fintech team weighs in on the *big ideas* they hope fintech will take on in the new year, from easing the housing crisis to automating the CFO suite. By @arampell, @astrange, @illscience, @rexsalisbury, & @seema_amble. Read & subscribe here: https://t.co/lTdNseAhFK
— a16z (@a16z) December 18, 2019
Dozens of companies are likely tracking your every move with no oversight. https://t.co/y8go1jDbYs
— Futurism (@futurism) December 19, 2019
Mixer and Facebook Gaming begin chipping away at Twitch's market share https://t.co/S38ZAaIrYC by @jeffgrubb
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 19, 2019
Smart take by @sarahtavel on how Softbank's mega-fund has inflated every financing stage all the way to pre-seed - new normal or will there be some regression over time? https://t.co/ITVOXbOtl8
— Boris Wertz (@bwertz) December 19, 2019
We've achieved state-of-the-art results in Hanabi, a collaborative card game in which players must work together. We use a new real-time search method similar to the one used in Pluribus. https://t.co/V80YsdKMvw pic.twitter.com/CKD1dqHcPy
— Facebook AI (@facebookai) December 19, 2019
People are writing long think-pieces trying to figure out wtf happened this decade. I can explain the whole decade in two photos.
— Aram Zucker-Scharff (@Chronotope) December 18, 2019
On the left: 2010, on the right: 2019 pic.twitter.com/Mj5WNnz6od
An excellent read by @alexeheath @theinformation
— Ben Bajarin (@BenBajarin) December 19, 2019
To Control Its Destiny, Facebook Bets Big on Hardwarehttps://t.co/4zXItyZDrH
I would have added "VERY VERY VERY Far" to this paragraph on Facebook's chances of success in hardware :) pic.twitter.com/Br0ec7UsK1
Uber creates AI to generate data for training other AI models https://t.co/bTAqfwVtsj
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 19, 2019
Simba: "Lured?"
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) December 19, 2019
Mufasa: "Gross subscriber additions must be greater than net subscriber additions given churn."
Simba: "A business must grow to not shrink?"
Mufasa: "The math is unavoidable my son. Churn is an embedded aspect of the Circle of Life."https://t.co/qrDHBjOj2h
I'm pleased to be cited in @DKThomp's new feature on the continuing stagnation in the physical world. Derek and I have ruffled some feathers so let me elaborate and possibly ruffle a few more. 🧵 https://t.co/l0GD14m6UB
— Eli Dourado (@elidourado) December 18, 2019
An investigation into the smartphone tracking industry https://t.co/yvXkEJWTzg (https://t.co/fZRjd5xsOh)
— Hacker News 200 (@newsyc200) December 19, 2019
Among other things, stories like this are an argument for platform owners exerting (even) more control over what developers and publishers are allowed to do, and doing more aggressive curation of the app stores https://t.co/Yy02zUOB1K
— Benedict Evans (@benedictevans) December 19, 2019
When we first started working with the data, we wanted to see if any sensitive sites were included. I zoomed into the Pentagon and saw this.
— Stuart A. Thompson (@stuartathompson) December 19, 2019
Our jaws hit the floor.
Full piece: https://t.co/fjFufwXyIp pic.twitter.com/0GB3KnhQcR
Solving for good: How new AI use cases can help change the world (Sponsored) https://t.co/ohLE2YzWtr
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 19, 2019
A Failed SaaS Postmortem https://t.co/sI0OETUrlf (https://t.co/43Mi8Wu4zJ)
— Hacker News 200 (@newsyc200) December 19, 2019
Spotify’s Tastebuds feature will let you explore your friends’ music tastes https://t.co/YUibDQHGfz pic.twitter.com/gFQaaH5Aou
— The Verge (@verge) December 19, 2019
A Harvard undergrad used OpenAI’s GPT-2 to generate deepfake text comments for a political campaign. The results are astounding; some bot comments fooled 100% of the judges: https://t.co/lyX15A06Yn This is exactly the dystopian use of GPT2 thatOpenAI was concerned about.
— fred benenson (@fredbenenson) December 19, 2019
1/ Founders fear the bubble—concerns are at a 4-year high.
— First Round (@firstround) December 18, 2019
Over two-thirds of founders who shared an opinion think we're in a bubble for tech companies, up 12% from 2018 and 25% from 2017.https://t.co/5nReBjAXKt pic.twitter.com/tQ3ieDdsFb
What actually happened: Blockbuster tried to buy Hollywood Video, but the FTC called this off on antitrust (!) grounds.
— Balaji S. Srinivasan (@balajis) December 19, 2019
By 2010 Blockbuster was bankrupt and Netflix was soaring.
In retrospect, state action was completely rearward looking and unnecessary.https://t.co/LndbQ2EIjd
DeepMind and Google recreate former NFL linebacker Tim Shaw's voice using AI https://t.co/CaT6lh3DnC by @Kyle_L_Wiggers
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 18, 2019
Puma’s first ‘active gaming footwear’ is a sock https://t.co/5JHUh4YQHD pic.twitter.com/tX8SnsMchq
— Engadget (@engadget) December 18, 2019
First airplane with no moving parts: no turbines, propellers, nor jets. Uses electroaerodynamic propulsion, where 40k volts generate ions moving from a larger electrode to a smaller one, colliding with air molecules on the way to produce "ionic wind".https://t.co/ImD7OxxD13 pic.twitter.com/tujjriAla2
— Reza Zadeh (@Reza_Zadeh) December 18, 2019
Wait, what? 🛸 https://t.co/CnAFp0FpTa
— Frank Chen (@withfries2) December 18, 2019
When does "additional customer data no longer enhance the value of an offering? The more slowly the marginal value decreases, the stronger the barrier is. Note that you should judge the value of the learning by customers’ willingness to pay." https://t.co/oSrIvUlgmz
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) December 18, 2019
"The last 10 years have been a renaissance for #opensource" great post from @a16z, with examples of value-market fit. https://t.co/i0mV9O4Gi5 pic.twitter.com/ex4ME68aN4
— Astrid (@astridbal) December 18, 2019
Anyone who is serious about investing in crypto should spend some time to study the principal agent problem in microeconomics. https://t.co/e9uZmZ5pmg
— Qiao Wang (@QWQiao) December 18, 2019
My favorite reads of 2019: pic.twitter.com/zdHTSInoyv
— Jack Altman (@jaltma) December 18, 2019
Deep Dive into Math Behind Deep #NeuralNetworks : https://t.co/kxMIMtSddn
— Kirk Borne (@KirkDBorne) December 18, 2019
—————#AI #MachineLearning #Mathematics #DeepLearning #BigData #DataScience #Algorithms
Wow. “Peter Thiel behind Facebook's political ad policy. Thiel pressed Facebook Chief Mark Zuckerberg to maintain a policy of not fact-checking political ads that appear on the social-media network.” https://t.co/jPLl3cquMe
— Marc Benioff (@Benioff) December 18, 2019
Nice comprehensive look at the state of federated learning research, including an overview of advances in the last three years (since https://t.co/87U9KkLxl2 in 2016), as well as a nice overview of open problems in the area.
— Jeff Dean (@JeffDean) December 17, 2019
105 pages, 485 references! https://t.co/suieSL0hwh
How to make a deepfake video. https://t.co/9Y6LG3EFUa
— Kevin Kelly (@kevin2kelly) December 17, 2019
Books I read in 2019, listed in no particular order: pic.twitter.com/qiqpXDgsUD
— Jamie Catherwood (@jfc_3_) December 17, 2019
Timeline of the Universe https://t.co/LCWgbNBz6f https://t.co/et8ZYoYlrh pic.twitter.com/7L4FemPvxb
— XKCD Comic (@xkcdComic) December 17, 2019
In this conversation with @m2jr, Marc Andreessen shares some rare, behind-the-scenes details of his journey from the University of Illinois and Mosaic, to Netscape... a story, really, of BEFOFE there was product-market fit: #StartingGreatnesshttps://t.co/E9EODAjY0w
— a16z (@a16z) December 17, 2019
launch your project on product hunt, then announce your product hunt launch on indie hackers, then share your indie hackers post on reddit, then share the reddit post on twitter. pic.twitter.com/9JatQQIN89
— Ali Salah 🛸 (@alisalahio) December 16, 2019
Subscriber topics analyzed 12/17/19
— Tech.pinions Think.tank Subscribers (@TPThinkTank) December 17, 2019
- The Business of Alexa
- The Challenge of AI
- The Early Stages of AI/MLhttps://t.co/K3hITw6iJ4
Exclusive: Google execs want to be no 1 or 2 in cloud by 2023 or may pullback. $goog. Great detail in important read about the state of google cloud. Echoes of the search wars but the tables have turned. https://t.co/OLBLIRFBbB
— Jessica Lessin (@Jessicalessin) December 17, 2019
After being named as new and noteworthy by @applepodcasts, we’re proud that DeepMind: The podcast with @FryRsquared is also one of the top shows in both the Science and Technology categories.
— DeepMind (@DeepMindAI) December 17, 2019
🎧 and subscribe here:
https://t.co/cGskA5MED4 pic.twitter.com/H9YTBUMvuE
Great interview with at @JeffDean, discussing some of @Azaliamirh and my work on ASIC design with ML: https://t.co/JlA3MN9XAu
— Anna D Goldie (@annadgoldie) December 16, 2019
[Impressive NeurIPS papers #2] "CNN^{2}: Viewpoint Generalization via a Binocular Vision," a brain-inspired and simple way to improve the generalizability of CNNs. https://t.co/rAgc0uf1aV
— Gerry S. Armstrong (@appfinca) December 16, 2019
Slides: https://t.co/I3fiSIEj7W#NeurIPS2019 pic.twitter.com/Z1ErFhCs5m
App Annie: The biggest apps and games of 2019 https://t.co/99AdmC9iMp
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 17, 2019
When @fredwilson, @jason, @cdixon & @semil built their personal brands via blogs/newsletters/twitter, very very few were doing it the way they were at the time. The current and next gen of VCs will have to find a different way to stand out and win... https://t.co/Xc3F9zVZcd
— Nakul Mandan (@nakul) December 17, 2019
Andreessen: "What you want is a flywheel [such as] more people reading with a browser leads to more people wanting to publish with a server. The more people who publish with a server, the more incentive there is to read, and you get a flywheel effect." https://t.co/3YdtDat8VX
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) December 17, 2019
Permission to Speak Freely
— Steve Jurvetson (@FutureJurvetson) December 17, 2019
Congrats to https://t.co/vBrxcT21bW for the debut of $OXT trading on @Coinbase today and the launch of the Orchid privacy network — a decentralized, open-source #VPN for secure & anonymous internet access, even in China.
Links ►https://t.co/xhIoQafPkh pic.twitter.com/7XI7YT11IY
The successor to Sony’s popular WH-1000XM3 headphones could be coming soon https://t.co/V3cmpmMc83 pic.twitter.com/CFBdTdhYFO
— The Verge (@verge) December 16, 2019
Most of the funding and market cap in a SaaS category goes to the category leader. The best way for founders to lead a category is to define it. Here are my thoughts on how to do that.https://t.co/D8aIGNkLtr
— David Sacks (@DavidSacks) December 16, 2019
Proof there are too many VC newsletters and podcasts. (Yes I know I contribute to this): pic.twitter.com/zZN0FPvvUa
— Kate Clark (@KateClarkTweets) December 16, 2019
"The PlayStation Reinforcement Learning Environment (PSXLE)" https://t.co/ELCoOGO8Rh -- Looking forward to the nostalgia when reading upcoming RL papers based on this env! ;) pic.twitter.com/F0L0f04o9L
— Sebastian Raschka (@rasbt) December 16, 2019
Something I'm seeing is game mechanics pop up in all sorts of industries. This is a deeper level than just the simple "gamification" of years past.
— Sriram Krishnan (@sriramk) December 16, 2019
@briannekimmel breaks this down and covers how it shows up in Superhuman https://t.co/z3BAjoCsUP
December is a great time to take stock of everything you’ve done over the last twelve months—including all of the books you’ve read. I found these books to be really clever and engaging. I hope you them find as intriguing as I did: https://t.co/xKdpvoXbvR pic.twitter.com/XZguGFYssO
— Bill Gates (@BillGates) December 16, 2019
DeepInsight is a decoding framework for discovering and characterising the neural correlates of behaviour and stimuli in unprocessed biological data:https://t.co/YH1DGqS8Ls pic.twitter.com/K6goibHlha
— DeepMind (@DeepMindAI) December 16, 2019
The growth of cognitive search in the enterprise, and why it matters https://t.co/SpUcCDOCe4
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 16, 2019
BMW shares AI tools used in production https://t.co/wUi8R1xpvN (https://t.co/n1EwVjRM53)
— Hacker News 200 (@newsyc200) December 16, 2019
AI Weekly: NeurIPS proves machine learning at scale is hard https://t.co/QxSZJKJ73r
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 16, 2019
In reporting this story about how AWS wields its power in the cloud computing world, I found that time and again Amazon lifted open source turned it into a paid service and ended up making more money than the company behind the technology. https://t.co/S887cknzVX 1/x
— Daisuke Wakabayashi (@daiwaka) December 15, 2019
DeepMind proposes novel way to train ‘safe’ reinforcement learning AI https://t.co/46p7RM6sGk
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 16, 2019
Google AI chief Jeff Dean interview: Machine learning trends in 2020 https://t.co/H4gHKQJDvO
— VentureBeat (@VentureBeat) December 15, 2019
Synthetic identities are coming.
— Balaji S. Srinivasan (@balajis) December 14, 2019
Software now allows you to generate realistic photos and videos of a person who does not exist.
And if identity politics is the currency of the realm, synthetic identities provide the ability to counterfeit that currency.
This 10-page (PDF) #DataScience Cheat Sheet covers concepts in Statistical Learning, #MachineLearning, #DeepLearning, Probability, #Statistics, #BigData frameworks, SQL, etc.
— Kirk Borne (@KirkDBorne) December 14, 2019
👉https://t.co/JfnKndDuuy👈
——————#AI #DataScientists #Algorithms #DataLiteracy #BeDataBrilliant #abdsc pic.twitter.com/LbSSLmcyrx