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Recent reports suggest the Crypto Clarity Act is no longer expected to be signed into law this year. While this could delay regulatory clarity in the U.S., I don't think it necessarily changes the long-term direction of crypto. Institutional adoption, blockchain development, and global regulation continue to move forward, but clearer U.S. legislation could still influence investor confidence and business decisions. Do you think this delay will have a meaningful impact on the market, or is it just another short-term headline? submitted by /u/Mission-Stomach-3751 [link] [Kommentare]
Was reading some research papers put out by Anthropic (and some other organizations/researchers) and one thing I've noticed is that these research papers consistently all share the same quality: Oftentimes over 100 pages of pure words, interspersed with screenshots of very dense/hard to read prompts and replies. Extremely-dry writing style. Oftentimes almost zero math or even math symbol to be seen. Uses some proprietary model with specific versions. Seems like a lot of work to (even want to) try to replicate their experiment. Discusses very subjective (and boring, at least to me) matters such as LLM emotions or introspections. Who are these papers even written for? Certainly nobody is sitting down to read 100+ of subjective interpretations for a model that's barely accessible to the public, right? There are assigned readings for highschool english classes that are shorter than these papers. It seems to be a huge effort now to even check one of these papers for correctness or to formulate some thoughts around the paper. Just very confused at the state of LLM research. submitted by /u/NeighborhoodFatCat [link] [Kommentare]
Hi everyone, I have a question for people following the Bybit Global / Bybit EU changes for EEA residents from July 1. I currently have an active crypto-backed loan on bybit com, not regular margin trading. Does anyone know what will practically happen to existing loans after July 1 for users from Poland / the EEA? I am especially interested in the following: Do existing loans need to be closed/repaid immediately, or can they still be maintained? After July 1, will users still be able to repay the loan manually, for example by selling part of the collateral or using collateral for repayment? Will it still be possible to add collateral, make partial repayments, and manage LTV normally? If the loan needs to be moved elsewhere, what is currently the closest alternative in Europe/EEA — OKX Flexible Loan, or something else? I understand that the official Bybit announcement only says that access to “certain services” on Bybit Global for EEA residents will be progressively limited, and that users will retain access to their assets in order to remediate positions and balances. However, I have not seen a clear loan-specific explanation yet. I would appreciate input from anyone. submitted by /u/TomekGregory [link] [Kommentare]
Hey guys. A couple months back I asked this sub for some reality checks on using a 30:1 metal cycloidal to replace 3D printed joints for QDD. The first batch of CNC parts finally showed up. I was honestly expecting the tight machining tolerances to make it bind up, but turning the output flange by hand... the back-drivability is wild. Just for context: we were getting super annoyed with stripping the 3D-printed plastic gears on open-source rigs like the Berkeley Lite and ALOHA. They are awesome projects, but the plastic joints are fragile and a nightmare to maintain. So we designed this as a drop-in replacement (calling it the Starfruit Actuator). Instead of printing two different plastic joint types, we wanted a single unified metal design to simplify the BOM and actually survive dynamic loads. Specs we're rolling with for the final drop: 30:1 ratio (30 teeth, 31 pins) Dual absolute encoders (supports FOC & MIT modes) Fully ODrive-compatible Target price: ~$149 Next up is integrating the motor and driver board, then throwing it on the test bench to see if it survives a 76 Nm torque test without exploding. Fingers crossed lol. Let me know what you think of the machining! All the STEP files, ROS2 nodes, and configs are going to be 100% open source. I'll drop the project link in the comments if anyone wants to track the testing or grab the files when they go live. submitted by /u/External_Wasabi9131 [link] [Kommentare]
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Three brothers and their scandalous father circle questions of faith, desire, guilt, freedom, and murder in Dostoevsky's final and largest novel.
Loko Scheme 0.13.0 is now available from: https://scheme.fail/releases/loko-0.13.0.tar.gz https://scheme.fail/releases/loko-0.13.0.tar.gz.sig A bootable disk image for 64-bit PCs is available from: https://scheme.fail/releases/disk-images/loko-hdd-0.13.0.img.gz https://scheme.fail/releases/disk-images/loko-hdd-0.13.0.img.gz.sig The signatures are made with the GnuPG key 0xDD839B748F10AD4D. Loko Scheme 0.13.0 fixes bugs, improves performance and adds features. See NEWS.md in the distribution for a more detailed summary of changes. Loko Scheme is an optimizing Scheme compiler that builds statically linked binaries for bare metal, Linux and NetBSD/amd64. It supports the R6RS Scheme and R7RS Scheme standards. Loko Scheme’s web site is https://scheme.fail, where you can find the release tarballs and the manual. There is also a mailing list at https://lists.scheme.fail. Loko Scheme is licensed under the EUPL v. 1.2 or later.