GradIEEEnt half decent: The hidden power of imprecise lines [video]
98 points by franzb 1 year ago | 9 comments- alserio 1 year agotom7 is always the right mix of genius, madness and fun
- tnecniv 1 year agoAny favorites you want to share? Loved this video
- alserio 1 year agoAs the other commenter said, everything on his channel is gold. Just the other day I was rewatching "Automated 3dfication of Nintendo games" https://youtu.be/xDxjbXAqTPg and "Harder Drives" https://youtu.be/JcJSW7Rprio
- iamevn 1 year agoAnything that catches your eye is good but my favorites are:
30 Weird Chess Algorithms: ELO World https://youtu.be/DpXy041BIlA
Reverse Emulating the NES to give it SUPER POWERS! https://youtu.be/ar9WRwCiSr0
- nick-of-time 1 year agoMine are "Harder Drives"[1], "ELO World"[2], and "Printable x86"[3]
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JcJSW7Rprio [2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DpXy041BIlA [3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LA_DrBwkiJA
- hyperific 1 year agoHarder drives is excellent. The comments section of that video is fun to scroll through.
- alserio 1 year ago
- tnecniv 1 year ago
- unlikelymordant 1 year agoPrevious post (but different): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35780921
- lostmsu 1 year ago:( did not have a patience to watch the entire video while focused. I know you could use rounding errors to replace non-linearity. Can somebody summarize what exactly he does for gradient descent here and how well does it work?
- mzs 1 year ago
- mzs 1 year ago