#writing

Say hello to Google Gemini models... or rather prepare for it

Say hello to Google Gemini models... or rather prepare for it

This is probably another day the whole industry was waiting for. Google has just released presented a new model called Gemini. After the PaLM 2 releases (with Gecko, Otter, Bison, and Unicorn models) in May 2023, Gemini was announced as the breakthrough in the field of generative AI (at least for Google in the global competition with OpenAI, Facebook, and the others).

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Grok 1 on the market

Grok 1 on the market

A few days ago (November 4, 2023) Elon Musk introduced the Grok, a new AI chatbot created by his company xAI, which is described as “entertaining and rebellious”.

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How to evaluate meaning of colors used on the website?

How to evaluate meaning of colors used on the website?

  • Sep 13, 2023
  • TIL

I love the red color - it is probably my favorite color for sports cars (I don’t have a red sports car, but I might have one).
This is also my favorite for guitars, and I had a red one for years.

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My AI/ML starting point, crash courses and roadmap

My AI/ML starting point, crash courses and roadmap

This is it. My starting point. I have been working with Machine Learning models for a while now, but I have never had a chance to learn the theory behind it. I have been using the models as a black box, and I have been able to get some results, or help as the engineer to build some MLOps pipelines - of course with the high level of ML knowledge required.

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Stop asking for my password dude!

Stop asking for my password dude!

  • May 2, 2023
  • TIL

It’s been a while since I discovered the ability to use Touch ID to authenticate sudo commands on my Mac. The idea is simple: instead of typing your password every time you need to run a command as a superuser, you can use your fingerprint to authenticate.

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Top 10 Linux commands you must... no, this is not that kind of article

Top 10 Linux commands you must... no, this is not that kind of article

Knowing Linux and its commands is the foundation of every DevOps engineer. For devs guys that came to DevOps with a… dev background ;) it might be a bit challenging to remember all of them, as they were not using them on a daily basis - at least not as often as the Linux sysadmins. The all of them is a bit misleading, and the truth is that every person has their own set of tools in the Swiss Army Knife - sometimes it is a bit bigger, sometimes smaller - but it is always more about being able to place them in the context of your work rather than remember tons of manuals and help pages.

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