gaston Ndoumbe

3.7K posts

gaston Ndoumbe

gaston Ndoumbe

@gazambey

IT Consultant ,Trainer, Udemy Content Creator.

Canada Katılım Haziran 2009
1.7K Takip Edilen819 Takipçiler
gaston Ndoumbe
gaston Ndoumbe@gazambey·
Interessante cette définition de la souveraineté selon amilabs :) . rien n'est simple
Fabien@Fabien_Mikol

Audition à l'Assemblée nationale de @lxbrun, cofondateur avec Yann Le Cun de @amilabs : "c'est peut-être risqué, mais quand on rate une étape [comme l'IA générative], c'est plus facile d'être leaders sur l'étape d'après [à savoir les world models] dans la révolution de l'IA".

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Dr. Drone 221 🇸🇳
Dr. Drone 221 🇸🇳@Dr__Drone·
On peut remplir des salles de conférence, aligner les PowerPoints et répéter “transformation numérique”… Pendant ce temps, dans plusieurs bureaux, des données sensibles dorment sur un PC personnel sous Windows cracké. Et honnêtement, pas besoin d’être un expert en cybersécurité pour comprendre cela… notre principale faille dans l’administration, ce sont parfois les ordinateurs eux-mêmes, avec des millions de chevaux de Troie installés “gratuitement” via des logiciels crackés 😆 #Senegal #PaysDe95PourcentDeLogicielsCrackés
Dr. Drone 221 🇸🇳 tweet media
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Fabien
Fabien@Fabien_Mikol·
Arthur Mensch (Mistral) : "aujourd'hui les ingénieurs logiciels chez Mistral n'écrivent plus de ligne de code", ce sont des "managers d'agents" ; la productivité est énorme pour un individu, mais au niveau d'une grande entreprise il reste un goulot d'étranglement organisationnel.
Assemblée nationale@AssembleeNat

🔴 Les dépendances structurelles et les vulnérabilités systémiques dans le secteur du numérique 🎙️ Audition d'@arthurmensch, cofondateur et directeur général de Mistral AI, et @AHerblin, directrice des affaires publiques et de la communication. #DirectAN twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…

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SimplyGregsterEV
SimplyGregsterEV@SimplyGregster·
Tesla Model 3 In Canada is cheaper than a Honda Accord, Civic Hybrid and Camry SE Hybrid. Even Cheaper in Québec
SimplyGregsterEV tweet mediaSimplyGregsterEV tweet mediaSimplyGregsterEV tweet media
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dank
dank@cptdankkk·
Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky reveals he felt sadness after hitting a $100 billion valuation "I had a lot of feelings, mostly great feelings and some sadness. I'd say it was 70% pride and exaltation and sense of accomplishment. But I had 20-30% sadness in a part of me" "The IPO was December 10th and you know what happened, the thing that shocked me was my life day to day was exactly like it was before the IPO. It was as if nothing had happened" "These things have merit, they are great to accumulate, but they're not going to fulfill you the way you thing they will"
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SonnyBoy🇺🇸
SonnyBoy🇺🇸@gotrice2024·
A family was visiting the Canada and United States border, there is a one-way turnstile into Canada. Their son was playing with the turnstile and accidentally ended up in Canada. The dad starts to yell at the child, claiming now he can’t come back since he’s in Canada now. He has to go through customs and he doesn’t have any paperwork on hand. When this happens, can’t they just loon at the camera and see he don’t mean to come over purposely and return him to his family?
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Professor Azeem Majeed
Professor Azeem Majeed@Azeem_Majeed·
I've always told my PhD students that a PhD is a marathon and not a sprint. Now that Sabastian Sawe has run the London Marathon in under 2 hours, I'll need to think of something else to tell them.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Nvidia is worth $5 trillion, more than the entire economy of Japan. No company in history has ever been worth more. It was started in 1993 in a Denny's diner by three engineers who put $200 each on the table. The CEO running it, Jensen Huang, grew up washing dishes at Denny's. He met two engineers at a booth in San Jose. Over cheap coffee, they started sketching out a company. Their plan was to build computer chips for video games, the kind that make 3D graphics look real on a screen. That was the pond they thought they were swimming in. Video games. Still a small industry in 1993. In 2006, Jensen made a decision that nearly killed the company. He started building software that turned his gaming chips into something more powerful. Scientists could now use them to do heavy math problems, the kind that used to require expensive supercomputers. Wall Street thought he was crazy. From 2006 to 2017, Nvidia spent close to $12 billion on this work while their revenue was only a few billion dollars a year. In 2014 alone, they put 30 cents of every dollar they made into research that was not paying off. Jensen later said it was the closest he ever came to killing his own company. Six years later, in 2012, a team at the University of Toronto built a program called AlexNet that could look at a picture and tell you what was in it. They trained it in a grad student's bedroom using two of Jensen's gaming chips that cost $500 each. They entered a contest and beat every other team in the world. Almost no one noticed. But Jensen did. He started rebuilding the entire company around teaching computers to think, even though almost nobody wanted that yet. Today, almost every AI in the world runs on Jensen's chips. In 2023, Larry Ellison, the founder of Oracle, said he and other tech CEOs had to spend an hour with Jensen at a sushi restaurant in Palo Alto, begging him for more chips. Jensen on the early years: "I had no idea how to do it. None of us knew how to do anything." The pond he thought he was swimming in was video games. The actual pond turned out to be every computer on the planet. The Denny's booth where it all started has a plaque on it now. It reads: "The booth that launched a trillion-dollar company." That number is now five.
Paul Graham@paulg

You don't know how big a fish you are till you try a big pond.

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gaston Ndoumbe
gaston Ndoumbe@gazambey·
@PsudoMike Hello @PsudoMike you seems to know a lot about this finctech ecosystem . is it possible to Wire transfer from Wealthsimple to an african bank?
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PsudoMike 🇨🇦
PsudoMike 🇨🇦@PsudoMike·
A dozen fintechs with African founding teams got Bank of Canada PSP registration since February. LemFi, Fincra, Chimoney, WeWire, Payaza, Juicyway. While Toronto watched Neo join Interac this month, this group quietly built the Canada Africa payments corridor. Regulatory standing now matters more than a banking partner willing to return your calls.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Universal HIGH INCOME via checks issued by the Federal government is the best way to deal with unemployment caused by AI. AI/robotics will produce goods & services far in excess of the increase in the money supply, so there will not be inflation.
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Shadé
Shadé@229Etranges·
Soglo , 1 mandat de 5ans Kérékou 2 mandats de 5ans Yayi 2 mandats de 5 ans Talon 2 mandats de 5 ans. Zéro coup d'Etat pour prendre le pouvoir. Zéro révision de la constitution pour s'éterniser à la tête du pays. Aucun de nos Papas n'a quitté le pays à la fin de son mandat. Même imparfait, je préfère cette altermance. Nous avons bien sur le droit de savourer ce qui se fait depuis 1990. Que ceux qui cherchent à y mettre fin ou écarter les autres se calment un peu. Excellente semaine à nous tous oû que nous soyons. PS: Allons chercher l'argent et payer nos impots. Nos politiciens en ont besoin. Vive le Benin 🇧🇯 Vive l'Afrique À bas les 4ème et 10ème mandats.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
NASA spent $4.1 billion to launch Artemis II, the first crewed moon mission since 1972. Seven hours in, Commander Reid Wiseman called Houston because Microsoft Outlook was broken on his tablet. He’d already tried turning it off and on again. It didn’t help. “I have two Microsoft Outlooks and neither one of those are working,” Wiseman said from Orion, currently on a 10-day trip around the moon. Why two Outlooks on one device? Because Microsoft ships two different email apps and calls them both “Outlook.” This has confused office workers for years. Apparently it follows you to space. Wiseman asked Houston to remote into his tablet and fix it. So NASA did exactly what your company’s IT department does, logged into his machine, poked around, got it working. Except the user was on his way to the moon. The tablet is a Microsoft Surface Pro loaded with Microsoft 365. NASA has a $100 million contract for those licenses across the agency. The crew uses them for email, schedules, and checking mission info. Same software your office runs, same headaches your office has. The computers actually flying the spacecraft are a different animal entirely. Two custom flight computers, built to survive the kind of radiation that would fry a normal laptop in seconds, running software built by Lockheed Martin. 20,000 times faster than what the Apollo astronauts had. If one computer dies, the other takes over instantly. These control life support, steer the ship, and handle every communication back to Earth. The Surface Pro runs Outlook. One half of Orion’s computing can survive cosmic radiation thousands of miles past the moon. The other half can’t stop two email apps from crashing at the same time. I looked up the history of space software bugs and it puts the Outlook thing in perspective. In 1999, NASA lost a $328 million Mars probe because one engineering team measured thrust in pounds and another used the metric system. Nobody caught it. The spacecraft came in too low and burned up in the Martian atmosphere. In 1962, a single missing symbol in a line of code destroyed a probe called Mariner 1 just 293 seconds after launch (under five minutes). That typo cost about $190 million in today’s money. Those bugs destroyed entire missions. Wiseman’s Outlook got fixed in a few hours. So did a toilet fan that jammed two hours after launch (in zero gravity, a broken toilet is a real problem). The computers keeping four humans alive at 25,000 mph around the moon never flinched.
Polymarket@Polymarket

JUST IN: Artemis II crew experiences issues with Microsoft Outlook on their way to the Moon, asks ground crew for assistance.

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gaston Ndoumbe
gaston Ndoumbe@gazambey·
On démarrée dans quelques instants
gaston Ndoumbe tweet media
Québec, Canada 🇨🇦 Français
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jeune_goural_
jeune_goural_@miloud_lionnel·
C’est bien d’acheter mais à quel moment il faut vendre ? Si tu vends pas tu n’encaisses et fait pas des gains et c’est ci que tout se joue. On t’explique un peu le mécanisme ⤵️⬇️ 1- Les signaux fondamentaux (les plus puissants) Exemple réel : certaines valeurs industrielles BRVM Quand les bénéfices chutent ou deviennent irréguliers. le cours finit toujours par suivre à la baisse. Exemple inverse : Sonatel • dividendes maintenus • performance stable Dans ce cas aucune raison de vendre au contraire il faut conserver. 2- Les signaux techniques Exemple fréquent : Une action casse un support important et elle entre dans une phase baissière longue. Sur plusieurs valeurs BRVM, ce scénario a piégé beaucoup d’investisseurs. 3- La sous-performance : le piège silencieux Comparaison simple : • ton action : +2% en 1 an • marché BRVM : +15% En vrai tu perds même si tu gagnes 4- Le vrai danger : l’émotion Cas typique : “Je vais attendre que ça remonte” . En somme , le capital reste bloqué et les opportunités peuvent être ratées. Inscrivez-vous à notre mentorat sur la construction de portefeuille BRVM en remplissant ce formulaire tally.so/r/aQxEZW ou 07 59 945 004 / 07 58 09 01 81 sinon tendancebrvm@gmail.com
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jeune_goural_
jeune_goural_@miloud_lionnel·
Inscrivez-vous à notre mentorat sur la construction de portefeuille BRVM en remplissant ce formulaire tally.so/r/aQxEZW ou 07 59 945 004 / 07 58 09 01 81 sinon tendancebrvm@gmail.com
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Siva Reddy
Siva Reddy@sivareddyg·
Montreal deep tech scene is getting hot!! Many recent hires of Cohere, Mistral, Periodic Labs, Poolside are all based in Montreal. And now, AMI will have an office here 🔥 It's a no-brainer, though. @Mila_Quebec has the highest concentration of deep learning expertise with interdisciplinary connections. Thanks to recent US regulation changes on immigration, no more brain drain! Let's build more in Canada!
Yann LeCun@ylecun

Unveiling our new startup Advanced Machine Intelligence (AMI Labs). We just completed our seed round: $1.03B / 890M€, one the largest seeds ever, probably the largest for a European company. We're hiring! [the background image is the Veil Nebula - a picture I took from my backyard, most appropriate for an unveiling] More details here: techcrunch.com/2026/03/09/yan…

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