>I think the big deal was the error correction scales or improves with as the number of qubits in quantum systems increases over time
Yeah, pretty much that, and also the fact that it performed really fast on a benchmark that they used. These were the two things that Google listed as "major achievements" at the beginning of their announcement blog post.
May I ask, where did you obtain this from? The only source I could find was this one. It wasn't published by any major media outlet so far. And I've heard that the actual document was "two to three pages long", so what we have right now is probably not the full thing yet.
For some reason, I've read that as "master race" and I've been thinking that that was what it said for like a day straight. I was so confused when I first saw this, thinking, what does some dog have to do with the master race and why does it involve Miku? I just viewed this post again today and noticed that it's actually "masterpiece". LMAO.
The album cover is the first impression you get of the album. People say "don't judge a book by it's cover", but how the hell am I supposed to pick an album out of a bazillion others? I go on youtube and there's an infinite feed of albums out there. I'm not gonna listen to every one of them. I need a way to filter them so that I would have a higher chance of picking something I would like. Album covers actually reflect the ideas and emotions behind an album therefore they can serve as indicators of something I could potentially enjoy. Yeah, sure, some albums may be extremely good but will have shitty covers and I'm gonna miss out on them if I always judge the book by it's cover, but realistically, what other quick method for picking albums do we get in 2024: the year of infinite album feeds?
Looks like file name doesn't matter on my end. It ends up showing up only in the order I selected.
What I think is happening here is that different browsers arrange the files differently in the submission request. Mainchan itself probably doesn't look at filename but only at whatever order the files arrive in.
I once witnessed a guy saving a waifu image on his phone. Apparently he had them all arranged in some kind of order because he was scrolling through his albums to find the right place to put this new image in. And as he was scrolling, there were hundreds, perhaps even thousands of images flashing on the screen. So I think your humble 136-image album isn't that bad compared to the massive collections that exist on other weebs' phones.
>I think the big deal was the error correction scales or improves with as the number of qubits in quantum systems increases over time
Yeah, pretty much that, and also the fact that it performed really fast on a benchmark that they used. These were the two things that Google listed as "major achievements" at the beginning of their announcement blog post.
This feline is not swimming, it is walking atop the waters. Jesus cat has returned.
May I ask, where did you obtain this from? The only source I could find was this one. It wasn't published by any major media outlet so far. And I've heard that the actual document was "two to three pages long", so what we have right now is probably not the full thing yet.
consult with the magic 8 ball to be sure
For some reason, I've read that as "master race" and I've been thinking that that was what it said for like a day straight. I was so confused when I first saw this, thinking, what does some dog have to do with the master race and why does it involve Miku? I just viewed this post again today and noticed that it's actually "masterpiece". LMAO.
The album cover is the first impression you get of the album. People say "don't judge a book by it's cover", but how the hell am I supposed to pick an album out of a bazillion others? I go on youtube and there's an infinite feed of albums out there. I'm not gonna listen to every one of them. I need a way to filter them so that I would have a higher chance of picking something I would like. Album covers actually reflect the ideas and emotions behind an album therefore they can serve as indicators of something I could potentially enjoy. Yeah, sure, some albums may be extremely good but will have shitty covers and I'm gonna miss out on them if I always judge the book by it's cover, but realistically, what other quick method for picking albums do we get in 2024: the year of infinite album feeds?
>after being dumb enough
Sir, this is a Belarusian Lego build forum. Please refrain from using the d-word. My 5-year old nephew goes on here.
What is America?
I feel like some parts of this song sound blackmetal-ish, especially towards the end.
Also, LMAO at that intro speech.
"Just one more video before bed"
the video:
Rami Malek is back in another hacker-guy role.
No running away from big search engine.
Looks more like pancakes tbh.
The algorithm recognized that you spend too much time indoors and tried to tell you to get some fresh air.
LMAO. I'm not American and neither do I live in the US and yet I still get frequent youtube ads about online voting.
treasure stone
Youtube randomly recommended me this band today and I have so far enjoyed listening to all their songs.
The internet, as a whole, is cooked.
What is this meant to be about?
That depends on what type of videos. If the topics would be something I somewhat care about, then yes, I would probably watch them.
Reminds me of this
https://youtu.be/5esjxBN17ls
Very nice. But have you seen Mainchan on a Nokia phone?
the russian howtobasic?
I just did some testing too
https://mainchan.com/s/testsub/6829/image-order-test
Looks like file name doesn't matter on my end. It ends up showing up only in the order I selected.
What I think is happening here is that different browsers arrange the files differently in the submission request. Mainchan itself probably doesn't look at filename but only at whatever order the files arrive in.
I once witnessed a guy saving a waifu image on his phone. Apparently he had them all arranged in some kind of order because he was scrolling through his albums to find the right place to put this new image in. And as he was scrolling, there were hundreds, perhaps even thousands of images flashing on the screen. So I think your humble 136-image album isn't that bad compared to the massive collections that exist on other weebs' phones.