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It appears to save to browser-local storage. Mine is still there after having the tab closed for at least 24 hours.

So... got any more of these?

I think the click logic may be a little twitchy. My trackball button worked okay, but my footpedal button frequently did what you describe here - possibly due to a longer-duration button press?

And yes, that would be helpful, but would remove part of the memory challenge. Maybe an optional feature?


Very challenging and fun. Score 1695 and mistakes 315 when I gave up and started Googling things. Did not do so well on (rot13)Nzrevpna ICf, pnegbbavfgf, be FAY pnfg zrzoref. Pbzcyrgryl zvffrq gur ncbpelcuny obbxf bs gur Ovoyr nf jryy. Gung jnf zrna!

Sonic Pi is by far the most accessible way to play with these tools. It's designed to teach music and coding to kids and has great starter tutorials, and a ton of depth as well. Check it out!


Mode feedback is the only thing I can think of, especially when you're getting used to the keyboard and/or have mode toggles set up. I don't have much use for my keyboard screens personally. Cool place to put a logo I guess.


Not familiar with that one, but two that come with Kali use search engines to locate subdomains. Your DNS server would have to be pretty misconfigured to allow zone transfers to the general public, which would be the only way to discover a truly "unlisted" subdomain.


My daily driver is an Allium58 not too different from the Moonlander. I love having modifier keys to set up macro functions and layers. My favorites from an ergonomics standpoint are Mod1+WASD for arrow keys (Q=home, E=end), Mod1+Capslock for double-click, and Mod1+Tab for middle click (my trackball doesn't have one). It didn't take too long to get to a faster WPM than I had on my previous 101-key mechanical, and I can go back to normal keyboards when I have to.


Well, TinyChat. Still mind-boggling. From the video description:

  I built a small language model in Minecraft using no command blocks or datapacks!

  The model has 5,087,280 parameters, trained in Python on the TinyChat dataset of basic English conversations. It has an embedding dimension of 240, vocabulary of 1920 tokens, and consists of 6 layers. The context window size is 64 tokens, which is enough for (very) short conversations. Most weights were quantized to 8 bits, although the embedding and LayerNorm weights are stored at 18 and 24 bits respectively. The quantized weights are linked below; they are split into hundreds of files corresponding to the separate sections of ROM in the build.

  The build occupies a volume of 1020x260x1656 blocks. Due to its immense size, the Distant Horizons mod was used to capture footage of the whole build; this results in distant redstone components looking strange as they are being rendered at a lower level of detail.

  It can produce a response in about 2 hours when the tick rate is increased using MCHPRS (Minecraft High Performance Redstone Server) to about 40,000x speed.


It would take just over 9 years for a response at the normal redstone tick rate... sounds about right.


The Minecraft AI Challenge: can your LLM company reach profitability before Minecraft can predict a token?


This can be achieved today.

Microsoft owns Minecraft; so they'll just swirl the numbers together with Minecraft sales to show their AI is already profitable.


> no command blocks

Oh. I thought this would be some cheesy command block curl to Chat GPT.


As far as I'm aware there's no way to do an HTTP request via command blocks, at least in vanilla.


Through Lua, all things are possible


The scripting language for Minecraft is Typescript. Lua would require a 3rd party mod.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/minecraft/creator/scriptap...

>The @minecraft/server-net module contains types for executing HTTP-based requests. This module can only be used on Bedrock Dedicated Server. These APIs do not function within the Minecraft game client or within Minecraft Realms.


* In Bedrock Edition. Minecraft purists only use Java Edition.


Yes, and this post may have been written by AI, but it wasn't. Corrected title: One person thinks the latest Hunger Games novel may have been co-authored by AI based on two examples and a "gut feeling".


Initially I was thinking "could be AI, could just be A3O-quality writing", but that whole "my grandmother's skin was as soft as a spiderweb" thing seems a bit much. It's very hard to imagine a human writing that.


It's also very hard to imagine a human writing Naked Lunch, yet here we are.


It is very easy to imagine a human being writing the corporeal homosexual horror of the Naked Lunch, especially a human being gone on a heroin bender in Tangiers drifting in and out of consciousness.


But skin as soft as spiderweb is out of human reach?


I've read plenty of dumb things in pre-AI books.


Dumb, sure, but "my, grandma, how spiderweb-y you are" is a bit out there.


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