0 Reacties
0 aandelen
64 Views
Bedrijvengids
Bedrijvengids
-
Please log in to like, share and comment!
-
WWW.WIRED.COM13 Best Earplugs (2025): for Concerts, Sleep, and ListeningWhether you want to sleep through the party or rock out (safely) to your favorite band, these will help block out the noise.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 31 Views
-
APPLEINSIDER.COMHow to enable or disable Spotlight extensions in macOSSpotlight extensions enhance third-party app searches, letting you look up more app-specific content. Here's how to enable or disable the extensions in macOS.Enable or disable Spotlight extensions in macOS's System Settings app.Spotlight is Apple's search indexing technology, which speeds up searches of data on your Mac or iOS device by storing metadata about files and their contents.From time to time, macOS runs a process in the background to catalog the files and data on your storage devices. This data is stored in an index that Spotlight can use to look up data when you do a search in the future. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums0 Reacties 0 aandelen 50 Views
-
ARCHINECT.COMSam Jacob appointed Dean of Institute of Architecture at University of Applied Arts ViennaThe Institute of Architecture (I oA) at the University of Applied Arts Vienna has appointed architect and academic Sam Jacob as its new Dean, following his nomination by the university’s Rektorate. Jacob, who joined the I oA in 2023 as a University Professor, will continue to lead Studio Sam Jacob within the institute while maintaining his London-based practice. This appointment signals a new direction for the I oA, known for its emphasis on critical and forward-thinking architectural education. Jacob succeeds Baerbel Mueller, who held the position of Vice-Dean from 2020 to 2021 and served as Dean from 2021 onward. Mueller will remain at the university, focusing on her work with [A]FA (Africa – Architecture), a research lab she founded in 2011. Her ongoing work at [A]FA continues to explore architectural research and design across African contexts. Related on Archinect: Next Up: Exhibit Columbus / Sam JacobJacob brings a strong international profile to the role. Since establishing S...0 Reacties 0 aandelen 54 Views
-
GAMINGBOLT.COMMarvel Rivals Gets Custom Outfit Colours as a Paid FeatureDeveloper NetEase Games has announced a new feature for competitive shooter Marvel Rivals that will further allow players to customise their characters. The feature, Costume Customisation, allows players to change the colour combos on various characters directly in the Costumes tab. The feature will be available in an update today. While the feature had fans of the games quite excited, the company has since revealed through a separate post on social media platform X that this new feature will not be available for free. Rather, players will have to pay 600 Unstable Molecules for costumes with customised colours. In its post, the company has stated that the exchange rate between Unstable Molecules and Lattice is 1:1. This announcement has caught quite a bit of flak from fans of Marvel Rivals, since it essentially adds a new paywall on top of the already-present paywall for buying new costumes. As the company notes that the feature will only be available for a few costumes, players will have to first acquire a supported costume before they can then spend more money on changing its colour scheme. “Customized Color Costumes will cost 600 Unstable Molecules for exchange,” posted to Marvel Rivals X account. “Unstable Molecules can be exchanged from Lattice at a 1:1 rate. You must first obtain the costumes before you can customize them. Initially, only a select few costumes will have this feature and we will expand more over time to other costumes.” “When you customize your colors, this will affect Intro Animation, MVP and Emotes. Starting Season 3, we will provide more options to obtain Unstable Molecules. Please let us know which costumes you want to see with Customized Colors in the future!” For context, the 600 Lattice that it would cost to use custom colour schemes amoutnts to around $5.98 through the 600 Lattice bundle available in the in-game store. This is ultimately an additional cost on top of whatever a player might have to spend on acquiring a costume that is compatible with the feature to begin with. Despite this, however, Marvel Rivals has been quite successful for NetEase. Back in February, the company revealed during its earnings report that the shooter had been played by more than 40 million players. Since this milestone was hit, NetEase has continued to add content to the game, including the addition of The Thing as a playable character. Back in March, director Guangyun Chen had said that performance optimisation for Marvel Rivals was also a priority for the studio. In an interview during GDC 2025, Chen said that the studio is working on lowering the RAM usage of the game, and that Season 2 might bring with a feature that could potentially help players on low-specced PCs in getting better frame rates. For more details about Marvel Rivals, check out our review. The game is available for free on PC, PS5 and Xbox Series X/S. You can also check out rumours about a possible cancellation of the game before it was released. ✨ Unleash your style – Costume Customization is here!You can change your favorite costumes' color combos directly in the Costumes tab starting April 17 at 9:00 AM UTC/2:00 AM PDT. Choose from fresh palettes like Plasma Pulse, Phantom Purple, and more!Just head to the Store,… pic.twitter.com/OswwJFOYEL— Marvel Rivals (@MarvelRivals) April 16, 2025 Hi Rivals!Customized Color Costumes will cost 600 Unstable Molecules for exchange. Unstable Molecules can be exchanged from Lattice at a 1:1 rate. You must first obtain the costumes before you can customize them. Initially, only a select few costumes will have this feature and…— Marvel Rivals (@MarvelRivals) April 17, 20250 Reacties 0 aandelen 41 Views
-
VENTUREBEAT.COMTwitch has its usual March viewership slump | StreamElementsStreamElements has released its latest report, which shows Twitch is having its usual dip in viewers in March.Read More0 Reacties 0 aandelen 55 Views
-
WWW.THEVERGE.COMNetflix revenue rises to $10.5 billion following price hikeNetflix said in its first quarter earnings report on Thursday that revenue reached $10.5 billion in the months since it raised prices. Thatâs a 13 percent increase over the same time last year. The streaming serviceâs net income also grew to $2.9 billion, and the company says it expects more growth in the coming months when it sees âthe full quarter benefit from recent price changes and continued growth in membership and advertising revenue.â Netflix raised the prices across most of its plans in January, with its premium plan hitting $24.99 per month. It also increased the price of its Extra Member option â its solution to password sharing â to $8.99 per month. Though Netflix already rolled out the increase in the US, UK, and Argentina, the streamer now plans to do the same in France. This is the first quarter that Netflix didnât reveal how many subscribers it gained or lost. It decided to only report âmajor subscriber milestonesâ last year, as other streams of revenue continue to grow, like advertising, continue to grow. Netflix last reported having 300 million global subscribers in January. During an earnings call on Thursday, Netflix co-CEO Greg Peters sai … Read the full story at The Verge.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 64 Views
-
WWW.MARKTECHPOST.COMDo Reasoning Models Really Need Transformers?: Researchers from TogetherAI, Cornell, Geneva, and Princeton Introduce M1—A Hybrid Mamba-Based AI that Matches SOTA Performance at 3x Inference SpeedEffective reasoning is crucial for solving complex problems in fields such as mathematics and programming, and LLMs have demonstrated significant improvements through long-chain-of-thought reasoning. However, transformer-based models face limitations due to their quadratic computational complexity and linear memory requirements, making it challenging to process long sequences efficiently. While techniques such as Chain of Thought (CoT) reasoning and adaptive compute allocation have helped boost model performance, these methods also increase computational costs. Additionally, generating multiple outputs and selecting the best one has been explored as a way to enhance reasoning accuracy. However, such methods still depend on transformer-based architectures, which struggle with scalability in large-batch, long-context tasks. To address these challenges, alternatives to the transformer architecture have been explored, including RNN-based models, state space models (SSMs), and linear attention mechanisms, which offer more efficient memory usage and faster inference. Hybrid models combining self-attention with subquadratic layers have also been developed to improve inference-time scaling. Moreover, knowledge distillation techniques, which transfer capabilities from large models to smaller ones, have shown promise in maintaining reasoning performance while reducing model size. Research into cross-architecture distillation, such as transferring knowledge from transformers to RNNs or SSMs, is ongoing to achieve high reasoning capabilities in smaller, more efficient models. Researchers from TogetherAI, Cornell University, the University of Geneva, and Princeton University present M1, a hybrid linear RNN reasoning model built on the Mamba architecture, which enhances memory-efficient inference. M1 is trained through a combination of distillation, supervised fine-tuning, and reinforcement learning. Experimental results on the AIME and MATH benchmarks show M1 outperforms previous linear RNN models and matches the performance of DeepSeek R1 distilled transformers. Additionally, M1 achieves a 3x speedup in inference compared to transformers of the same size, boosting reasoning accuracy through techniques like self-consistency and verification, making it a powerful model for large-scale inference.The M1 model is built through a three-stage process: distillation, SFT, and RL. First, a pretrained Transformer model is distilled into the Mamba architecture, with a modified approach to linear projections and additional parameters for better performance. In the SFT stage, the model is fine-tuned on math problem datasets, first with general datasets and then with reasoning-focused datasets from the R1 model series. Finally, RL is applied using GRPO, which enhances the model’s reasoning ability by training with advantage estimates and encouraging diversity in its responses, thereby further boosting its performance. The experiment uses the Llama3.2-3 B-Instruct models as the target for distillation, with the Mamba layers utilizing a 16-sized SSM state. The evaluation encompasses a range of math benchmarks, including MATH500, AIME25, and Olympiad Bench, assessing model performance based on coverage and accuracy. The pass@k metric is used for coverage, indicating the likelihood of a correct solution among generated samples. The model’s performance is compared with that of various state-of-the-art models, yielding competitive results, particularly in reasoning tasks. The inference speed and test-time scaling are evaluated, demonstrating M1’s efficiency in large-batch generation and longer sequence contexts. In conclusion, M1 is a hybrid reasoning model based on the Mamba architecture, designed to overcome scalability issues in Transformer models. By employing distillation and fine-tuning techniques, M1 achieves performance comparable to state-of-the-art reasoning models. It offers more than 3x faster inference than similar-sized Transformer models, especially with large batch sizes, making resource-intensive strategies like self-consistency more feasible. M1 outperforms linear RNN models and matches Deepseek R1’s performance on benchmarks such as AIME and MATH. Additionally, it demonstrates superior accuracy under fixed time budgets, making it a strong, efficient alternative to Transformer-based architectures for mathematical reasoning tasks. Here is the Paper. Also, don’t forget to follow us on Twitter and join our Telegram Channel and LinkedIn Group. Don’t Forget to join our 90k+ ML SubReddit. Sana HassanSana Hassan, a consulting intern at Marktechpost and dual-degree student at IIT Madras, is passionate about applying technology and AI to address real-world challenges. With a keen interest in solving practical problems, he brings a fresh perspective to the intersection of AI and real-life solutions.Sana Hassanhttps://www.marktechpost.com/author/sana-hassan/Do We Still Need Complex Vision-Language Pipelines? Researchers from ByteDance and WHU Introduce Pixel-SAIL—A Single Transformer Model for Pixel-Level Understanding That Outperforms 7B MLLMsSana Hassanhttps://www.marktechpost.com/author/sana-hassan/Biophysical Brain Models Get a 2000× Speed Boost: Researchers from NUS, UPenn, and UPF Introduce DELSSOME to Replace Numerical Integration with Deep Learning Without Sacrificing AccuracySana Hassanhttps://www.marktechpost.com/author/sana-hassan/SyncSDE: A Probabilistic Framework for Task-Adaptive Diffusion Synchronization in Collaborative GenerationSana Hassanhttps://www.marktechpost.com/author/sana-hassan/Transformers Can Now Predict Spreadsheet Cells without Fine-Tuning: Researchers Introduce TabPFN Trained on 100 Million Synthetic Datasets0 Reacties 0 aandelen 42 Views
-
WWW.IGN.COMStar Wars Outlaws Release Date Announced for Nintendo Switch 2Ubisoft had already confirmed Star Wars: Outlaws as one of the games that will be coming to the Nintendo Switch 2, but today we learned the space adventure won't be a launch title when the new Nintendo handheld is released on June 5, instead arriving a few months later on September 4. If you missed it on PS5, XBox and PC, Star Wars Outlaws is set between the events of The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi and follows Kay Vess, a small time criminal who finds herself with a death mark from a cartel against her name. Our reviewer gave it a 7, saying it was "a fun intergalactic heist adventure with great exploration, but it’s hindered by simple stealth, repetitive combat, and a few too many bugs at launch."Ubisoft didn't have many details to share beyond reiterating that the title would be available on Nintendo Switch 2 and confirming when, but at least we can update the Switch 2 Games List. With American and Canadian gamers locked in pre-order limbo as Nintendo assesses the impact of the new tariffs introduced by the Republican administration, any news on Nintendo Switch 2 games getting released is a welcome distraction. The news was announced during a panel at Star Wars Celebration in Japan today, where Ubisoft also gave fans a look at the second story pack headed to Star Wars: Outlaws, titled A Pirate’s Fortune. The add on will see Kay joining allying with Hondo Ohnaka to take on Stinger Tash, leader of the Rokana Raiders. Star Wars: Outlaws: A Pirate’s Fortune will be released on May 15.Rachel Weber is the Senior Editorial Director of Games at IGN and an elder millennial. She's been a professional nerd since 2006 when she got her start on Official PlayStation Magazine in the UK, and has since worked for GamesIndustry.Biz, Rolling Stone and GamesRadar. She loves horror, horror movies, horror games, and French Bulldogs. Those extra wrinkles on her face are thanks to going time blind and staying up too late finishing every sidequest in RPGs like Fallout and Witcher 3.0 Reacties 0 aandelen 45 Views
-
9TO5MAC.COMRumor Replay: Apple Vision Air, iPadOS 19 and watchOS 12, moreThis is Rumor Replay, a weekly column at 9to5Mac offering a quick rundown of the most recent Apple product rumors, with analysis and commentary. Today: Apple Vision Air, iPadOS 19 getting Mac-like, watchOS 12, and AI Siri’s surprising timing. Here are this week’s Apple rumors. Apple Vision ‘Air’ coming with midnight finish After a period of seemingly little activity from Apple regarding Vision Pro successors, this was a big week for leaks. Mark Gurman reported that Apple is currently developing two new headsets: one will be lighter and less expensive, while the other is optimized for connecting to a Mac for ultra-low latency. Then Kosutami leaked details and photos of what is likely the first model Gurman referenced. This ‘Vision Air’ product is said to employ titanium to reduce weight, and will come in a midnight black finish. My takeaways Apple Vision Air sounds like the sort of next product the Vision line really needs. A device that’s lighter and cheaper would solve two of Vision Pro’s biggest problems. The rumor of a new Vision product that plugs into a Mac is especially interesting. I wonder if Gurman’s just hearing about two prototypes that are actually intended to be part of the same finished product. The benefits he mentions for being Mac-connected seem a bit niche for a whole new product, but maybe it’s only a small part of what Apple has planned. iPadOS 19 will bring macOS-inspired upgrades We’ve heard a lot about iOS 19 and its big redesign, but this week brought intriguing details about the iPad’s next major update. Per Mark Gurman, this fall’s iPadOS 19 will “focus on productivity, multitasking and app window management — with an eye on the device operating more like a Mac.” My takeaways I’ve used the iPad as my full-time computer for nearly a decade. During that time, Apple has made several different attempts at giving it Mac-like capabilities—with very mixed results. As a result, I’m skeptical that iPadOS 19’s changes will actually deliver what iPad users want. Every bit helps, for sure. But I’m especially curious if Apple plans to replace existing multitasking systems, or just add to them like it did with Stage Manager. As I recently wrote, the stakes are higher this time around because of upcoming hardware. I suspect iPadOS 19’s multitasking changes could impact next year’s iPhone Fold and possibly even the first touchscreen Macs. No pressure, Apple. New Siri features on the way sooner than expected In a wide-ranging article on Apple’s recent AI and Siri struggles, The New York Times reported that the recently delayed Siri features would arrive sooner than we thought. Per the report, Apple plans to ship its AI Siri upgrades this fall in iOS 19. My takeaways This was just the latest piece of good Siri news recently. And it’s a welcome update following what had been a narrative of doom before. If WWDC came and went with Siri’s upgrades still MIA, that would cast a dark cloud over Apple’s other AI-related announcements. But if Apple can confirm the delayed features are launching this fall, it will be an encouraging sign that internal Siri issues might be over. watchOS 12 will have Apple Intelligence with a twist Apple Watch doesn’t yet support Apple Intelligence, at least not officially. But it seems watchOS 12 will change that. Mark Gurman reported this week that watchOS 12 will include several Apple Intelligence features, even while the AI models actually run on your paired iPhone. My takeaways As we hit the year mark following Apple Intelligence’s introduction, it’s a good time for AI to land on every major product lacking it now. I never really expected Apple Watch hardware to run AI models locally. But if Apple can offer a system that feels native and performs well—like current “unofficial” features—users shouldn’t care either way. What are your takeaways from this week’s Apple rumors? Let us know in the comments. Best iPhone accessories Add 9to5Mac to your Google News feed. FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel0 Reacties 0 aandelen 45 Views