Déma ⭐⭐🧡
31.2K posts

Déma ⭐⭐🧡
@DemaSane
“The true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit.”

95 Bodies of Black forced labor prisoners from Jim Crow era are believed to have been found in Sugarland, Texas.

🚨JUST IN: FIFA has banned tailgating before World Cup matches at major U.S. stadiums. Tailgates are normally free to attend.




Exclusive @TheAthleticFC : Current NJ Transit plans for return train from NY Penn Station to MetLife Stadium during World Cup are for tickets to be priced at over $100. Usual price is $12.90, making it more than a 7-fold increase for World Cup fans. nytimes.com/athletic/71933…

Exclusive @TheAthleticFC : Current NJ Transit plans for return train from NY Penn Station to MetLife Stadium during World Cup are for tickets to be priced at over $100. Usual price is $12.90, making it more than a 7-fold increase for World Cup fans. nytimes.com/athletic/71933…


Exclusive @TheAthleticFC : Current NJ Transit plans for return train from NY Penn Station to MetLife Stadium during World Cup are for tickets to be priced at over $100. Usual price is $12.90, making it more than a 7-fold increase for World Cup fans. nytimes.com/athletic/71933…



Indian factory workers wear head-mounted cameras to capture data for training robotics AI models. This image captures a blunt truth about robotics: teaching a machine to move in the real world is still painfully expensive. What looks dystopian at first is also a clue about the bottleneck. Robots do not learn useful physical behavior from internet-scale text the way language models do. They need embodied data: hands reaching, wrists turning, objects slipping, fabric folding, tools resisting, people recovering from small mistakes in real time. That data is rare because reality is slow, messy, and costly. A robot fleet is expensive to buy, expensive to maintain, hard to supervise, and dangerous to scale in uncontrolled settings. Even teleoperation is costly, because every minute of human-guided movement requires hardware, operators, calibration, and failure recovery. So companies go looking for the cheapest possible proxy for physical intelligence. First-person video from factory workers is not the same as robot action data, but it can still be valuable because it captures sequencing, posture, bimanual coordination, and the micro-adjustments that make real work look easy. The frontier in robotics is not just better models. It is better pipelines for collecting reality itself. That is why warehouses, factories, kitchens, and repair benches matter so much: they are dense environments of repeated contact with the physical world, which is exactly what robots lack. The unsettling part is that this turns human labor into training infrastructure twice over, first as work, then as data. And until embodied data becomes cheaper to gather than human motion is to record, robotics will keep learning from workers before it fully replaces them.

Luc Ferry, pensant être au bon endroit sur CNews pour extérioriser ses idées nauséabondes en parlant de “dompter les élèves de banlieue”, est surpris d’être recadré ce matin par le propagandiste d’extrême droite Pascal Praud, qui a peur d’un autre procès ou signalements Arcom.

Indian factory workers wearing head-mounted cameras to record hand movements for training AI systems








🚨 OFFICIAL 🚨 DAZN & TNT Sports launch landmark U.S. partnership with new live boxing series The Fight 🥊



🚨 OFFICIAL 🚨 DAZN & TNT Sports launch landmark U.S. partnership with new live boxing series The Fight 🥊

