Crul
@Crul@lemm.ee
- Comment on 1-bit CPU for ‘super low-performance computer’ launched – sells out promptly 11 months ago:
AFAIK, they are used as relays.
From en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1-bit_computing#1-bit
Computers and microcomputers may also be used, but they tend to overcomplicate the task and often require highly trained personnel to develop and maintain the system. A simpler device, designed to operate on inputs and outputs one-at-a-time and configured to resemble a relay system, was introduced. These devices became known to the controls industry as programmable logic controllers (PLC).
See also the playlist linked in the other comment with more explanations:
1-Bit Breadboard Computer - Usagi Electric (YouTube) - Comment on 1-bit CPU for ‘super low-performance computer’ launched – sells out promptly 11 months ago:
For those curious about 1-bit computers, see Usagi Electric’s playlist:
- Submitted 11 months ago to psychedelic_artwork@psychedelia.ink | 0 comments
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- Submitted 11 months ago to psychedelic_artwork@psychedelia.ink | 0 comments
- Art by Bob Pepper: Cover for Franz Schubert - Symphonies No. 1 & 2, Stuttgart Symphony Orchestra, Karl Ristenpart (1975)64.media.tumblr.com ↗Submitted 11 months ago to psychedelic_artwork@psychedelia.ink | 0 comments
- Comment on Absolutely astonishing deep sea giant just filmed by scientists 11 months ago:
Direct links:
- Submitted 11 months ago to psychedelic_artwork@psychedelia.ink | 1 comment
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- Comment on The Other Place by Mat Miller 11 months ago:
Source: “The Other Place” Artwork by Mat Miller Art - Unveiling the Enigmatic Realm — Mat Miller
Certain places can evoke a sense of otherworldliness and strangeness. Whether it be abandoned buildings, overgrown forests, or desolate landscapes, these places have a way of stirring the imagination and inviting us to explore their mysteries.
- Submitted 11 months ago to science_memes@mander.xyz | 9 comments
- Submitted 11 months ago to psychedelic_artwork@psychedelia.ink | 0 comments
- Comment on Jungle by Harry Pack Art 11 months ago:
Source:
- Nitter link
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- Comment on ‘Xenosmilus and Titanis’, by John Michael Golero 11 months ago:
Source:
- Nitter link
- Nitter RSS Feed: nitter.cz/j_stocky/rss
- Comment on Which of the Fediverse projects are worth getting into? 11 months ago:
Thanks!
- Comment on Which of the Fediverse projects are worth getting into? 11 months ago:
I tried Pixelfed (very briefly) not so long ago. I didn’t find a propper way to search for content. How do you discover new content?
- Comment on Fairphone has created a smartphone that owners can repair themselves - This sustainable smartphone aims to reduce global electronic waste 11 months ago:
- Comment on sea bunnies 11 months ago:
- Comment on *Neanderthals hunting mammoth* (1897), unknown artist, artwork photograph courtesy of The Beaker Institute Science Library 11 months ago:
Credit: Travis Chapman (@Travispaints)
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- Comment on Spider peets appreciation post 11 months ago:
!awwnverts@lemmy.world may like this!
- Comment on Gobble gobble 11 months ago:
Credit: Rosemary Mosco
Sources:
- Submitted 11 months ago to psychedelic_artwork@psychedelia.ink | 0 comments
- Submitted 1 year ago to psychedelic_artwork@psychedelia.ink | 0 comments
- "We're all just walking each other home - Ram Dass" by Devyn Moon (Creationtrip)64.media.tumblr.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to psychedelic_artwork@psychedelia.ink | 4 comments
- Comment on As a beginner, how should I go about learning difficult concepts? 1 year ago:
How long would you say it took you before getting a fundamental understanding?
I would say years, as with any complex activity.
I’m still forgetting things I learned 3 or even 4 times like how to do a for each loop.
You can forget in 2 different ways:
1.- Forget how to use something, so you need to look how to do it. 2.- Forget that something exists, so you cannot even look for it because you are not aware it’s a possibility.
You will forget-1 everything which you don’t use on a daily basis. That’s what internet is for. Forgetting in the 2-nd sense is much more rare and you should do something if that’s the case.
all of it feels too advanced and I get lost on how to begin
This is a bias most of us have, you overlook how easy is for you to do things that previously were impossible and focus on how hard are the things you still don’t know how to do. And computing is so complex right now that there always be “infinite” things you don’t know.
Try whoing what you know to someone who doesn’t know how to code and you will get an idea of how much you have learnt :).
Anyway, I don’t really have good advice :/, just wanted to confirm that what you feel is expected. Good luck!
- Comment on Mossie birbs!! 1 year ago:
Top left picture credit Camilo Carneiro:
- @Camilo_Carneiro: “Very late golden plover hatchlings. Still beautiful! #fieldwork” - Nitter link
- @Camilo_Carneiro: “They are moss with legs!” - Nitter link
Nitter RSS Feed: nitter.cz/Camilo_Carneiro/rss
Posted to !goblincore@lemmy.blahaj.zone: Gloden Plover chicks covered in moss-looking camouflage - Camilo Carneiro
- Comment on A number chosen truly at random will have infinite digits 1 year ago:
I think you’re confusing “arbitrarily large” with “infinitely large”. See Wikipedia Arbitrarily large vs. (…) infinitely large
Furthermore, “arbitrarily large” also does not mean “infinitely large”. For example, although prime numbers can be arbitrarily large, an infinitely large prime number does not exist—since all prime numbers (as well as all other integers) are finite.
- Comment on A number chosen truly at random will have infinite digits 1 year ago:
For integers I disagree (but I’m not a mathematician). The set of integers with infinite digits is the empty set, so AFAIK, it has probability 0.
- Comment on A number chosen truly at random will have infinite digits 1 year ago:
Doesn’t it depends on if we are talking about
n∈ℝ
orn∈ℤ
? - Comment on A number chosen truly at random will have infinite digits 1 year ago:
I also think that’s correct… if
n ∈ ℝ
.People are probably thinking about
n ∈ ℤ
.