Philipp Tiefenbacher

910 posts

Philipp Tiefenbacher banner
Philipp Tiefenbacher

Philipp Tiefenbacher

@wizard23

open source hard & software design

가입일 Mart 2007
833 팔로잉302 팔로워
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Abakcus
Abakcus@abakcus·
Here's Looking at Euclid by Helen Friel. Helen Friel is a paper engineer and she make beautiful things. Look at these paper sculptures of Oliver Byrne's version of Euclid's Elements. 😍
Abakcus tweet mediaAbakcus tweet mediaAbakcus tweet mediaAbakcus tweet media
English
11
278
1.4K
82.4K
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Alibaba Cloud
Alibaba Cloud@alibaba_cloud·
Meet Qwen3.6-27B, our latest dense, open-source model, packing flagship-level coding power! What's new: Outstanding agentic coding Strong reasoning across text & multimodal tasks Supports thinking & non-thinking modes Apache 2.0 Smaller model. Bigger results.
English
92
248
3.2K
8.2M
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Interface gallery
Interface gallery@Interface_art·
In 1968, when computers were still seen as cold calculating machines, Jasia Reichardt curated an extraordinary exhibition in London called Cybernetic Serendipity. Artists, engineers, poets and scientists came together to explore the creative possibilities at the intersection of art and technology.The result was something remarkably ahead of its time. If you're curious about the early days of the relationship between computers and art, the catalogue is essential reading. The catalogue from Cybernetic Serendipity is filled with ideas, experiments and reflections that feel surprisingly relevant in our current AI era. You can read the full PDF for free here: monoskop.org/images/2/25/Re… Highly recommended! Take your time with it. thanks @monalisa for the tip!
Interface gallery tweet media
English
20
387
2.6K
91.1K
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Movez
Movez@0xMovez·
This 30-minute speech by the Head of Anthropic "Coding Agents" researcher will teach you more about vibe coding than 100 paid courses. Bookmark it & give it 30 minutes today. This video will change the way you use AI forever,
Movez@0xMovez

This weather bot turned $300 → $122K on Polymarket weather markets in 3 months I fully decoded algo and built a self-learning Hermes weather trading agent using weather APIs + Opus 4.7, the bot runs 5-min scans & searches mispricings on Polymarket run your agent in 5 steps: • set up a VPS server on Hetzner - $6 • create a weather API on {visualcrossing} - free • set up Hermes agent using one-liner code - free • connect Telegram bot + Opus 4.7 • send {weather trading logic} from article to agent started my agent 2 days ago with a test sum and already having 40% profit agent already caught 2 traders with +400% ROI on Seoul & Chicago weather markets bot used for logic: @coldmath?via=following" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">polymarket.com/@coldmath?via=… my bot test wallet: @hermesweather?via=following" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">polymarket.com/@hermesweather… Hermes bot is a self-learning agent so give him enought trades {100+}, to build his own logic. start small

English
89
1K
9.8K
1.5M
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Allen Braden
Allen Braden@allen_explains·
This 2-hour Stanford lecture breaks down how models like ChatGPT and Claude are actually built, clearer than what many people in top AI roles ever get exposed to. Save this and set aside two hours today. It might end up being the most valuable thing you learn all week.
English
162
4.5K
27.6K
3.4M
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Something I taught 14 yo: Most progress is a mix of steps forward and steps back, just with with more of the former. But you can get a run of steps back. So to judge progress accurately you need to use a big enough window, or it could look like you're failing.
English
96
175
2.2K
78.5K
Maxim Orlovsky
Maxim Orlovsky@dr_orlovsky·
@wizard23 And no, if you listen to physics - and not physics podcasts, it is not “just a scaling problem” in no way. It is a fundamental problem
English
1
0
0
28
Maxim Orlovsky
Maxim Orlovsky@dr_orlovsky·
This is quantum resistent #Bitcoin: QR Bitcoin. It was created using the zillion of open-claw AI agents running the latest balanced ternary quantization of the leaked Anthropic Claude AI! Just show it to each quantum computer - and your funds will be safe.
Maxim Orlovsky tweet media
English
3
1
6
1.7K
Uncle Bob Martin
Uncle Bob Martin@unclebobmartin·
What we are losing with AI is syntax -- and good riddance. The less our brains are occupied by semicolons and braces the better. There are much more important things for us to consider and manage.
English
119
153
1.9K
247.3K
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Shubh Srivastava
Shubh Srivastava@TheSuperEng·
If I ever do a master's in computer science, I'll do it in quantum computing. What will you do in?
English
14
1
18
842
Philipp Tiefenbacher
Philipp Tiefenbacher@wizard23·
@dr_orlovsky neither are undefined...we just don't know. And we already have quantum computers so it's just a scaling problem which will be solved in the next 10 years if you listen to physicists. I did not study physics so I trust my friends in academia about such topics.
English
2
0
0
27
Maxim Orlovsky
Maxim Orlovsky@dr_orlovsky·
I am pretty sure the probabilities are the same as with the black hole: undefined, with no scientific (statistical) way of estimation. No statistical way -= no computable probability. So nobody knows what will happen during our lifetime: black hole arrives, QC, both or neither. It is just beliefs, not knowledge. And I do not argue about beliefs
English
1
0
0
32
Philipp Tiefenbacher
Philipp Tiefenbacher@wizard23·
@dr_orlovsky 😂 no black hole will arrive within our lifetime...I agree. But we seem to have a totally different guess about when quantum computing will arrive. I'm pretty sure it will be here within 10 years...so yes I take precautions ;)
English
1
0
0
36
Maxim Orlovsky
Maxim Orlovsky@dr_orlovsky·
@wizard23 What will happen once a black hole will eat the Earth? The answer is “sorry, have more problems to care about”.
Maxim Orlovsky@dr_orlovsky

I think today threat is very low, and we do not exactly know which form it would take, so pointless to change anything basing on hype and absence of clear understanding of the shape of the threat. Research is alsways good (into post-quantum cryptography with reasonable signature size), but it exactly what @blksresearch is doing! Nothing else than research should be done at this stage, no consensus changes are advised.

English
1
0
1
64
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Theo - t3.gg
Theo - t3.gg@theo·
Agents are good at bash. Bash is not good for agents. We should cut our losses and restart now before it is too late.
English
77
54
1.5K
588.1K
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
bonzo
bonzo@wordisbonz·
i lived in my car for 478 days in sf. lol, while working at a startup.
English
392
357
7.5K
670K
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸
Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸@FarzaTV·
I built this thing called Clicky. It's an AI teacher that lives as a buddy next to your cursor. It can see your screen, talk to you, and even point at stuff, kinda like having a real teacher next to you. I've been using it the past few days to learn Davinci Resolve, 10/10.
English
1.3K
1.2K
15.7K
2.9M
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Benjamin Bardou
Benjamin Bardou@benjaminbardou·
Vertigo of Latent Space Montage marked the decisive invention of cinema: a mode of associating images capable of producing new relations. Yet this potential has remained largely unexplored, as cinema has most often reproduced narrative forms inherited from the novel. With artificial imagination, another regime of images emerges. Images are no longer simply arranged; they transform into one another within a continuous space. It then becomes possible to work not with sequences, but with transitions, passages, thresholds. Vertigo is approached here as a latent structure, a field of forms in circulation. The film becomes a set of persistent forms that reactivate, deform, and recombine in contact with other images. What is at stake here is less a reinterpretation of the film than an attempt to approach thought in action: its movement, its bifurcations, its reminiscences. In The Flow, this research unfolds on another scale. It seeks to follow the flow of consciousness, not as narrative, but as a continuous dynamic in which films, memories, and history intermingle and circulate. This work around Vertigo constitutes a variation: a way of exploring how a film can dissolve into this flow and become one of the sites from which thought begins to move.
English
17
88
682
45K
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Ben Dicken
Ben Dicken@BenjDicken·
Merkle trees are everywhere: - ZFS uses them to detect data corruption - Git uses them to verify repo integrity - Cursor uses them for codebase sync - Bitcoin uses them for transaction verification Talked through how they work on the latest database stream.
English
25
184
2.1K
133.6K
Philipp Tiefenbacher 리트윗함
Mathematica
Mathematica@mathemetica·
“Clouds are not spheres, mountains are not cones, coastlines are not circles, and bark is not smooth, nor does lightning travel in a straight line.” — Benoit Mandelbrot
English
14
151
1K
68.1K