• Cooking School for Migrants of Renovation Industrial Hall / FREAKS
    www.archdaily.com
    Cooking School for Migrants of Renovation Industrial Hall / FREAKSSave this picture! David FoesselFranceArchitects: FREAKS ArchitectureAreaArea of this architecture projectArea:700 mYearCompletion year of this architecture project Year: 2023 PhotographsPhotographs:David FoesselManufacturersBrands with products used in this architecture project Manufacturers: BASF, Bildau & bussman, Forbo, ROTOR DC, Ross Structural Steel, Sammode Lighting Lead Architects: Guillaume, Cyril Gauthier, Yves Pasquet, Ivan Mata Save this picture!More SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!Text description provided by the architects. The project consists of setting up a cooking school for the Cuistots Migrateurs association in a former local industrial building located in Montreuil, France, made up of a metal structure with hangar roofs.Save this picture!The school offers cooking training for regular migrants, offering both theoretical and practical courses. The interior spaces are organized to accommodate kitchen rooms equipped with individual workstations, technical rooms, changing rooms, and a double-height "agora" event space, connecting the interior to the exterior square.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!Upstairs there are classrooms, offices and a lunch area for students. Two staircases and a personnel elevator allow fluid circulation between levels.Save this picture!Save this picture!Aesthetically, the renovation respects the existing industrial architecture: the design of the facade ispreserved and improved to include contemporary elements while retaining the original style. The facade and exterior joinery are made of wood, to harmonize with the brick and concrete of the building, and create a space that is both warm and functional.Save this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessProject locationAddress:Rue de Romainville, Montreuil, FranceLocation to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.About this officeFREAKS ArchitectureOfficeMaterialsWoodBrickMaterials and TagsPublished on January 27, 2025Cite: "Cooking School for Migrants of Renovation Industrial Hall / FREAKS" 27 Jan 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1026165/cooking-school-for-migrants-of-renovation-industrial-hall-freaks&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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  • Music's Soundscape Is Becoming Simpler over Time
    www.discovermagazine.com
    (Credit: carlos castilla/Shutterstock) NewsletterSign up for our email newsletter for the latest science newsHow is music changing over time? On one scale, its easy to see how music evolved through the ages as baroque music was displaced by classical, romantic and then modern music. In the 20th century alone, jazz, country and western, rocknroll all emerged along with pop, rap, hip hop and so on. Much of this rapid rate of change was driven by new ways of composing, experiencing and sharing music via vinyl, cassettes, CDs and mp3s. The emergence of digital streaming platforms, social networks and composing technologies like GarageBand have accelerated these changes by breaking down barriers and enabling new forms of musical expertise. So an important question is how this new cultural landscape is changing the nature of music. And today we get an answer thanks to the work of Niccol Di Marco at Sapienza University of Rome, and colleagues, who have developed a way to think about musical compositions as networks and then to use the tools of network science to study how it is changing over time. They say this network approach clearly distinguishes between musical genres and that it reveals clear changes in music composition over timescales stretching from months to centuries.Soundscape NetworkRevealing the network properties of a piece of music is straightforward. The trick is to think of each note as a node on the network. These nodes are connected by an edge if they appear consecutively in the composition. The edges become thicker depending on the number of times one note transitions into another. This approach immediately reveals patterns associated with distinctive styles. For example, classical music often contains complex sequences of notes that repeat throughout the composition. The network structure then clearly represents these themes. But pop music by comparison tends to consist of simpler sequences repeated far more often. This leads to smaller structures within the network that are more tightly linked. Jazz has a more diffuse structure of links, and so on.A key advantage of this approach is that scientists have developed highly sophisticated mathematical tools to study the properties of networks. These have come from areas as diverse as the study of the spread of disease, of the structure of the internet and of food networks in ecosystems. Di Marco and co have been able to bring all this to bear on the structure of music. The team analyzed approximately 20,000 MIDI files spanning six genres of music from the last four centuries. This expansive dataset provided a broad base to compare genres such as classical, jazz, rock, and pop, across different time periods. Notable differences immediately became apparent. Our results show that classical and jazz compositions have higher complexity and melodic diversity than recently developed genres, say Di Marco and co.Simple MindsBut curiously, the network analysis reveals that these forms of music are becoming simpler. A temporal analysis reveals a trend toward simplification, with even classical and jazz nearing the complexity levels of modern genres, they say. This simplification trend raises intriguing questions about the factors driving the change. The researchers speculate that technological advancements, changes in listening habits promoted by digital music platforms, and shifts in cultural production and consumption are an important influence. Our study highlights that the democratization of the composition process and the advent of new technologies and platforms have fostered the development of genres characterized by reduced complexity relative to earlier eras, they say. This kind of change is not unique to music. Di Marco and co point out that similar simplification trends have been observed for other forms of cultural expression, such as language and literature. The observed trend of musical simplification reflects broader societal changes, including the influence of global interconnectedness, rapid content dissemination, and the algorithmic curation of music consumption."Ref: Decoding Musical Evolution Through Network Science : arxiv.org/abs/2501.07557physics1 free article leftWant More? Get unlimited access for as low as $1.99/monthSubscribeAlready a subscriber?Register or Log In1 free articleSubscribeWant more?Keep reading for as low as $1.99!SubscribeAlready a subscriber?Register or Log In
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  • I didnt know what the heck I was doing on ChatGPT until I took this course
    www.popsci.com
    Stack CommerceShareWe may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Learn more Im not going to liewhen ChatGPT first came out and blew everyones minds, I was pretty hesitant about it. Im not going to say I was anti-AI, but I just figured Id do the work myself to ensure it was right, especially since Id heard a few of my coworkers complain about how ChatGPT could never give them perfect results.But in recent months, Ive started getting so much more scrambled with work, and its not super sustainable to rely on myself for all the answers. So, I finally started branching out and using ChatGPT, but ran into similar frustrations my coworkers did. Thankfully, I found thisChatGPT beginner course for only $9.99, and its seriously upgraded how I understand the chatbot and create prompts.For starters, I was just typing in literal questions and wording ideas I had into ChatGPT, hoping it would spit out something that wasnt complete trash. Unfortunately, the answers and responses I got werent quite helpful. Thats where this online ChatGPT course came in!Once you know exactly how to sweet-talk this chatbot, it becomesso much easier to streamline your workday. I mean, ChatGPT is capable of so much, whether you need answers to technical questions, image generation, or copy generation for marketing campaigns or blogs. Heres exactly what I learned in this course to make ChatGPT work for me:How to write effective ChatGPT prompts to get the answers I needHow to get ChatGPT to develop copy like poetry, character biographies, and articlesHow to use the chatbot to learn more about people, places, and thingsHow to use ChatGPT to brainstorm ideas for my personal and professional projectsIm a little embarrassed it took me this long to come around with ChatGPT, but Im glad I found a resource thats helped me level up how I use this chatbot daily.Join me and learn how tomaster ChatGPT prompts with this absolute beginner course, now just $9.99 (reg. $50) for lifetime access.StackSocial prices subject to change.ChatGPT for the Absolute BeginnerOnly $9.99 at Popular Science
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  • This tool is like ChatGPT, but for creative needs
    www.popsci.com
    Stack CommerceShareWe may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Learn more If you think ChatGPT is cool, wait until you see what this creative AI platform can do. Yeah, we know GPT can get pretty crafty, but were talking about an AI thats specifically designed to generate art, logos, stories, articles, code, and morenot just help you with your busy work.AI Magicx also offers users lifetime access to their premium AI features for a one-time payment, while Open AI gatekeepers their models behind recurring fees. AI Magicxs lifetime subscription is also affordable with our coupon code TAKE30 at checkout, dropping the cost from $972 to $70 for a limited time.Maybe you run a blog and constantly need new images to feature in your posts. Your AI Magicx subscription allows you to generate 250 AI images each month. And, if you need help writing or brainstorming, you can generate unlimited words.Heres how simple it is to do something like generate an AI logo with AI Magicx:Open the AI Magicx web app on any device.Select the AI logo tool.Enter a description of your dream logo.Choose a style, color palette, and background color.Click Generate.Before you ask, youre free to use anything you create with AI Magicx anywhere you need since a commercial license is included (and its generated with AI).Use code TAKE30 at checkout to get your AI Magicx lifetime subscription for $70 (reg. $972) for a limited time and create essentially unlimited AI art.StackSocial prices subject to change.AI Magicx: Lifetime Subscription (Rune Plan)See Deal
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  • Extreme heat will kill millions of people in Europe without rapid action
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 27 January 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00239-4Climate models predict that the number of heat-related deaths could soar in cities over the coming century, even when efforts are made to keep people safe.
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  • Daily briefing: What went wrong at 23andMe
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 24 January 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-00247-4Scientists are defecting to Bluesky from X en masse. Plus, the bumps in the road that led to 23andMes downfall.
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  • Which color tone is better?
    v.redd.it
    submitted by /u/SleepRen_Official [link] [comments]
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  • Check Out This Geometry Nodes-Powered Birch Tree Generator
    cgshares.com
    3D Artist Jesse Miettinen, also known as Blenderesse, has unveiled a fantastic new work-in-progress procedural birch tree generator created with Blender using the softwares Geometry Nodes toolset.Featuring superfast canopy calculations, wind, and root deformations, the setup calculates Proximity to determine branch lengths for each main branch to keep things lightweight, passing the information to sub-branches and twigs to enhance the effect. Im also doing a clever trick to pre-calculate the end position of each branch(single point) for the proximity. So instead of doing proximity for the whole branch, I do it before instancing on points and scale the instances with the attribute, the artist explained.Going forward, Jesse also plans to introduce several simple setups for creating stylized root shapes, we highly encourage you to follow the artist on Twitter so as not to miss any future updates.Previously, the creator experimented with layering multiple rain effects based on geometry:And prior to that, Jesse made all of his Blender add-ons yes, literally all of them available for free.Dont forget to join our80 Level Talent platformand ournew Discord server, follow us onInstagram,Twitter,LinkedIn,Telegram,TikTok, andThreads,where we share breakdowns, the latest news, awesome artworks, and more.Source link The post Check Out This Geometry Nodes-Powered Birch Tree Generator appeared first on CG SHARES.
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