cm0002

joined 1 week ago
 

Israeli drone strike kills two in Gaza as ceasefire violations mount | Israel-Palestine conflict News | Al Jazeera
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/11/10/israeli-drone-strike-kills-two-in-gaza-as-ceasefire-violations-mount

#Palestine #Gaza #Israel @palestine@fedibird.com

 

UAE refuses to join Gaza stabilisation force without clear legal framework | Gaza | The Guardian
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/nov/10/uae-says-it-will-not-join-gaza-stabilisation-force-without-clear-legal-framework

"Decision reflects wider regional doubts about terms of US-drafted plan to disarm Hamas"

#Palestine #Gaza #Israel #UAE @palestine@fedibird.com

 

This application is a local only web instance that can be spun up in termux.

Here is the source code.

Its configured to be a local only service utility although it wouldn't take much to point this to the web.

After picking a image, you can configure the compression. I found large image files basically require the compression. There is a limit to how much text you can copy...its very large...but the higher quality the image the longer this string of text will be, so you may need to lower the quality if you run into problems.

You can either copy the text directly, or download a blob as the .txt file for transport.

Termux side server manager.

Encrypted blob example.

 
 
 

A new paper argues that current LLMs are fundamentally broken because they're completely static. They call it "anterograde amnesia", which is honestly spot on. A model gets pre-trained, and from that moment on, its weights are frozen. It can't actually learn anything new. Sure, it has a context window, but that's just short-term memory. The model can't take new information from its context and permanently update its own parameters. The knowledge in its MLP layers is stuck in the past, and the attention mechanism is the only part that's live, but it forgets everything instantly.

The paper introduces what they term Nested Learning to fix this. The whole idea is to stop thinking of a model as one big, deep stack of layers that all update at the same time. Instead, they take inspiration from the brain, which has all kinds of different update cycles running at different speeds in form of brain waves. They represent the model as a set of nested optimization problems , where each level has its own update frequency. Instead of just deep layers, you have levels defined by how often they learn.

The idea of levels was then used to extend the standard Transformer which has a fast attention level that updates every token and the slow MLP layers that update only during pre-training. There's no in-between.

The paper presents a Hierarchical Optimizers and Parallel Extensible model with additional levels. You might have a mid-frequency level that updates its own weights every, say, 1,000 tokens it processes, and a slower-frequency level that updates every 100,000 tokens, and so on. The result is a model that can actually consolidate new information it sees after pre-training. It can learn new facts from a long document and bake them into that mid-level memory, all while the deep, core knowledge in the slowest level stays stable. It creates a proper gradient of memory from short-term to long-term, allowing the model to finally learn on the fly without just forgetting everything or suffering catastrophic forgetting.

 

Previously known as Fantasy Grounds Unity, the developers at SmiteWorks have now made Fantasy Grounds VTT free to play.

Originally, this virtual tabletop required someone to spend at least $50 for an Ultimate License (or a monthly fee) to be able to actually host a game with it. Now, all users gain access to the platform without having to spend anything. While the base software is now free there's tons of content that is not including licensed packs like Alien, Dungeons and Dragons, Pathfinder and so on.

 

We've [had] DXVK and VKD3D-Proton for various versions of Direct3D on Linux, but now it seems we're also getting Direct3D 7 as well.

From the GitHub page the developer describes how it works:

A Vulkan-based translation layer for Direct3D 7, which allows running 3D applications on Linux using Wine. It uses DXVK's d3d9 backend as well as Wine's ddraw implementation (or the windows native ddraw) and acts as a proxy between the two, providing a minimal d3d7-on-d3d9 implementation. The project is currently in its early days. Expect most things to run, but not necessarily correctly or optimally.

 

I'm not entirely sure what I thought of THRASHER but it's certainly a unique experience and it's officially out now with Linux / Steam Deck support. Note: a key was provided to GamingOnLinux.

For people who played the game THUMPER, this comes from the artist & composer behind it. Not a game I've actually played before, so I went in entirely cold on it. But what I do know, is that they're very different games. Where THUMPER is a rhythm game, THRASHER is an arcade-style smasher that sees you go through some very strange worlds to defeat a bunch of unusual looking otherworldly boss creatures.

 

Fish shell, a popular user-friendly command-line shell, has announced version 4.2, a new release that builds on the 4.0 series. Among the most visible improvements is an upgrade to history-based autosuggestions, which now properly handle multi-line commands.

Fish 4.2 also improves how prompts are managed: transient prompts that contain more lines than the final one are now cleared properly, preventing visual clutter on screen. Similarly, the shell now hides parts of a multi-line prompt that have scrolled out of view, eliminating duplicated lines after repainting.

 

Last week when delivering some CachyOS benchmarks against Fedora 43 and Ubuntu 25.10 on the Framework Desktop with AMD Ryzen AI Max+, a few Phoronix readers wrote in with the question or belief that openSUSE Tumbleweed would better perform against CachyOS given the distribution's select x86_64-v3 packages and other advantages. As it's been a while since running any benchmarks of the rolling-release openSUSE Tumbleweed, here are those benchmarks now in the mix for seeing how the performance compares.

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