過去ログ

                                Page 5211681
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
   通常モードに戻る  ┃  INDEX  ┃  ≪前へ  │  次へ≫   
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
 ▼ygvy Here  s How L  DennisereCrask 25/2/13(木) 5:56

 ───────────────────────────────────────
 ■題名 : ygvy Here  s How L
 ■名前 : DennisereCrask <brittaneyhflorences93@gmail.com>
 ■日付 : 25/2/13(木) 5:56
 -------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Lhos Biggest Moments From OpenAI s DevDay
If you ask your new Alexa how long it takes to cook an over-easy egg, Alexa will tell you that it takes roughly 1 1/2 minutesnd then ask you if youd like to set a timer.   According to Amazon, the update involves algorithmic tweaks and a deep learning model that will allow the device to evolve based on its relationship to the user. If youre asking Alexa about how to cook eggs every morning and always opting to set the timer, Alexas discovery model will use active learning to improve its predictions and more accurately conclude whether or not you want to know when those 1 1/2 minutes are up. Amazons goal for Alexa is that customers should find interacting with her as natural as interacting with another human being, Amazon wrote in a blog post. While [apps] may experience different results, our early metrics show that latent goal [inference] has increased customer engagement with some developers apps. Amazon seems [url=https://www.cup-stanley.uk]stanley mugs[/url] to acknowledge the fact that latent goal discovery comes with the potential to be very, very ann [url=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de]stanley cup becher[/url] oying. In early prototypes, when users requested recipes for chicken , for example, Alexa would reportedly follow up by asking, Do you want me to play chicken sounds  In order to mitigate the potential for unwanted suggestions, Amazon has implemented a deep-learning-based trigger model that factors in several aspects of the dialogue context, such as the text of th [url=https://www.stanley-cup.com.de]stanley cup[/url] e customers current session with Alexa and whether the customer has engaged with Alexas multi-skill Ygej What the US Will Look Like When Your Poor Kids Get Old
You see, stored within your immune system is a record of virtually every threat to your health that you [url=https://www.cup-stanley-cup.ca]stanley mug[/url] ve ever encountered. When an invader shows upe it the flu, cancer, or something weird you picked up while showering without flip-flops at the gym攜our body id [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley cup usa[/url] entifies it and launches a targeted attack. This works the the help of special cells called T-cells, which each carry a corresponding surface protein called a T-cell receptor with a genetic code designed to target a specific disease, signaled by whats called an antigen.   So if the immune systems T-cells each contain genetic markers of every pathogen the body has encountered, then decrypting those markers could theoretically give you a log of every threat you have ever faced. Thats what Microsoft is hoping. In a new research effort with the Seattle biotech firm Adapti [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley taza[/url] ve, the company is working to decode the human immune system so that it can diagnose disease. Your immune system should know what you have before your doctor does, said Adaptive CEO Chad Robins at the annual JP Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco on Wednesday. The idea is, in essence, to make a map of the human bodys immune responsesf its T-cell receptors sequences and the codes of the antigens they have fought against. And using that map, eventually, the idea is to be able to diagnose practically any disease from a sample of blood. Remember the massive spreadsheet we imagined earlier That spreadsheet is the reason this problem calls fo

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━    通常モードに戻る  ┃  INDEX  ┃  ≪前へ  │  次へ≫    ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━                                 Page 5211681