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Computers may be naturally fluent in binary, but how might they fare with learning human languages Computers were tested by playing the game Civilization. Random chance let them win about half the time 8230;but then they started reading the
stanley cups instruction manual. MIT researchers gave their AI this particular challenge because winning a game like Civilization is so comple
stanley cup x. At first, the computer only had the most limited of knowledge, as a press release explains: It begins with virtually no prior knowledge about the task it intended to perform or the language in which the instructions are written. It has a list of actions it can take, like right-clicks or left-clicks, or moving the cursor; it has access to the information displayed on-screen; and it has some way of gauging its success, like whether the software has been installed or whether it wins the game. But it doesn ;t know what actions correspond to what words in the instruction set, and it doesn ;t know what the objects in the game world represent. From that starting point, the computer eventually managed to win the game about 46% of the time. It reached that success rate by playing the game a bunch of times and being able to gauge how successful its different actions were, maximizing the actions that led to victory and minimizing those that led to defeat. In and of itself, that moderately impressive but nothing too am
stanley bottle azing. But then the researchers gave the computer access to the instructi Kllb The Court Transcript For the Hasbro vs. Asus Transformer Prime Case Is Hilarious
Here is a captivating moonrise in three parts, captured by photographer Dan Marker-Moore. Up first: a 10-second timelapse of a full moon rising above the smoggy L.A. skyline. The clip captures the moon half-hour transformation from a ruddy sphere low on the city horizon, into a gleaming white orb, hung high in the night sky. Next up, a time-slice photograph 鈥?a composite image that combines stills from 11 timepoints across 27 minutes and 59 seconds to depict the Moon trajectory and color change in a single image: And finally, a
stanley mug looping GIF of the Moon, rising angular and escalator-like over the horizon: Just gorgeous. Easily our favorite moonrise since this one, which was shot back in January over Wellington, New Zealand. Believe it
stanley cup or not, the linked New Zealand moonrise footage is presented in real time 鈥?i.e. it not a timelapse. Definitely worth checking out. Marker-Moore gets extra points for creativity. If all moonrises could now be presented in GIF + time slice form, that would be excellent.
https://gizmodo/a-moonrise-unlike-any-youve-ever-seen-5980370 See more of Marker-Moores work on
stanley trinkflaschen his website and Tumblr. [Spotted on Peta Pixel] Science