Livedata

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Livedata

@Livedata

Webdev & AI Web App Development - Javascript - Data Visualization - ProcessWire - Seo - Core Web Vitals - Open Source

Remota Katılım Mart 2009
90 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
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Batu
Batu@yetkisizherif·
bir otel çalışanı her gün yüzmeye gelen yavru ördeklerin havuzdan rahatça çıkabilmeleri için havluyu ıslatıp basamak yapıyor
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Nature is Phenomenal
Nature is Phenomenal@AnimalGeoLife·
SinSin having breakfast
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Big Brain AI
Big Brain AI@realBigBrainAI·
Marc Andreessen explains why AI coding won't replace programmers, but fundamentally change what they do. He argues that AI coding is just the latest abstraction layer, and the job of a programmer has always evolved with each one. Andreessen's key reframe of what's actually happening: "AI coding actually abstracts away the process of actually writing the scripting code... This is the next layer of the task redefinition under the job of programmer." He's clear that the best programmers aren't being replaced. They're already adapting, even if their day-to-day looks radically different now. Their job has shifted from writing code line by line to managing dozens of AI agents working in parallel. "The world's best programmers today will tell you, 'My job is I'm sitting there and I'm orchestrating 10 code bots running in parallel.' Their day job now is kind of arguing with the AI bots to try to get them to write the right code." But @pmarca is adamant this doesn't make foundational knowledge obsolete — it makes it more important. "You need to still fully understand and learn how to write and understand code, because if it doesn't work or it's not doing what you expect, you need to be able to understand the results of what the AI is giving you." He draws a direct parallel: Just as someone writing scripting languages still needs to understand how a microprocessor works, someone orchestrating AI bots needs to understand the code those bots produce. "It's this upleveling of capability where you actually want the depth to go down and understand what the thing is actually doing, even if you're not spending your day doing that by hand." The result, in his view, is transformative: "Now programmers are going to be 10 times or 100 times or a thousand times more productive. And that is overwhelmingly a good thing." The pattern: New abstraction layer emerges → tasks change → the job gets redefined upward → productivity explodes It raises a question every programmer should be sitting with... Are you building the depth to evaluate what AI gives you, or just accepting the output?
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 Fabiö Lisci 
 Fabiö Lisci @FabioLisci·
In Sardegna funzionava così, dalla notte dei tempi
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Tyler Fox
Tyler Fox@smileyborg·
Software engineering in 2026
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F.O.L.A
F.O.L.A@folaoftech·
She has no clue what her son is up to… honestly, I don't get it either.
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The Wolf Man
The Wolf Man@iTheWolfman·
I can't stop laughing 🤣🤣
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Frenkie_Woody
Frenkie_Woody@Frenkie_Woody·
Non metterti contro chi ha più di cinquant’anni: non è solo un’altra generazione, è una generazione di sopravvissuti. Sono cresciuti con le chiavi di casa al collo, interi pomeriggi per strada e ginocchia piene di cicatrici che raccontano avventure. Hanno imparato presto ad arrangiarsi: cucinare, aggiustare, trovare soluzioni senza internet e senza tutorial. Hanno visto nascere tutto: dal telefono a disco allo smartphone, dalle cassette riavvolte con la penna allo streaming illimitato. Hanno viaggiato con una cartina spiegata sul cofano dell’auto e sono sempre arrivati a destinazione, affidandosi più all’istinto che al GPS. Forse non sono nativi digitali, ma sanno adattarsi a ogni cambiamento. Perché chi è cresciuto senza scorciatoie ha sviluppato qualcosa che non si scarica online: resistenza, esperienza e una sorprendente capacità di cavarsela sempre.
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Quincy Larson
Quincy Larson@ossia·
This weekend learn computer science from Harvard professor @davidjmalan. freeCodeCamp just published the newest version of CS50. [FREE 26-hour course] Here are this week's five freeCodeCamp resources that are worth your time: 1. Learn computer science and Python programming from Harvard's David J. Malan. This is the new version of the famous CS50 course. It will teach you Python programming fundamentals like functions, conditionals, loops, libraries, file I/O, and more. If you're new to Python, or to coding in general, this is an excellent place to start. (25 hour YouTube course): freecodecamp.org/news/harvard-c… 2. And a few weeks ago I had the honor of interviewing Harvard CS50 professor David J. Malan on the freeCodeCamp podcast. I was hyped to ask him how he uses emerging LLM tools, and where he thinks the software engineering field is heading. I had a LOT of questions for him and he answered all of them. (1 hour watch or listen in your favorite podcast app): freecodecamp.org/news/harvard-c… 3. That Harvard computer science course will get you started with programming. But where do you go from there? freeCodeCamp just published a helpful tutorial that will help you bridge from beginner projects to building real-world applications that solve real-world problems. (40 minute read): freecodecamp.org/news/how-to-go… 4. freeCodeCamp also just published a comprehensive intro to OpenClaw. If you've heard of Clawd Bot or Moltbot, this is the same tool, which they renamed to avoid confusion with the Claude LLM tool. OpenClaw is an agent and messaging gateway that lets you automate digital tasks through platforms like Discord. First you'll learn how to set it up. Then you'll learn security practices like implementing Docker-based sandboxing to protect your host system while your agent executes complicated workflows on your behalf. (1 hour YouTube course): freecodecamp.org/news/openclaw-… 5. You may be using Bluetooth as you read this. It's been a key networking tool since 1999, and now it's getting 3 major upgrades: Passive Scanning, Bond Loss Reasons, and propagation of Service UUIDs. If you're interested in network engineering or IoT–style devices, this tutorial is well worth your read. (90 minute read): freecodecamp.org/news/how-aosp-… The freeCodeCamp community is working hard to bring you all the open source learning resources you need to learn programming and ultimately land a job or become a freelance developer. If you're finding these helpful, I encourage you to join the 10,021 kind folks who support our charity each month: freecodecamp.org/donate Quote of the Week: “There’s something liberating about realizing that at the end of the day everything reduces to zeros and ones. It’s not magic. And once students see that, they think: OK, I got this.” — Harvard computer science professor David Malan on this week's freeCodeCamp podcast
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Puppies 🐶
Puppies 🐶@Puppieslover·
A man raps with his dog at the Apollo and wins over one of the toughest crowds
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Bytebytego
Bytebytego@bytebytego·
9 Key AI Concepts Explained in 7 minutes - Tokenization - Text Decoding - Prompt Engineering - Multi Step AI Agents - RAGs - RLHF - VAE - Diffusion Models - LoRA
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Essential Mastery
Essential Mastery@EssentialMastry·
“It takes a lot of hard work to make something simple.” - Steve Jobs
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Mia The mystery girl
Mia The mystery girl@GirlMia9079·
No way brooo 🤣🤣🤣🤣
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matrixbot
matrixbot@thematrixb0t·
17 Seconds
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Jenica Eugenia
Jenica Eugenia@2Dinu83028·
Me encanta este video!😄❤️
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Puter
Puter@HeyPuter·
A computer in your browser, free and open-source!
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Essential Mastery
Essential Mastery@EssentialMastry·
“I was an ordinary person who studied hard. There's no miracle people.” - R. Feynman
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Philosophy Of Physics
Philosophy Of Physics@PhilosophyOfPhy·
According to the 30 years of experience of Physicist Federico Faggin Mathematics is created by consciousness so we cannot explain consciousness with mathematics.
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