Reference Summary: The PDP1 was a groundbreaking computer from the 1950's - but where does it fit into computing history and how would you use it ... Language Models' Achilles heel: Rob Miles talks about "glitch" tokens, those mysterious words which, which result in gibberish ...
Emulation Computerphile -
The PDP1 was a groundbreaking computer from the 1950's - but where does it fit into computing history and how would you use it ... Language Models' Achilles heel: Rob Miles talks about "glitch" tokens, those mysterious words which, which result in gibberish ... The Bit Blit algorithm dates back to Xerox PARC, but was famously used to sell the Amiga home computer among others.
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- The PDP1 was a groundbreaking computer from the 1950's - but where does it fit into computing history and how would you use it ...
- Language Models' Achilles heel: Rob Miles talks about "glitch" tokens, those mysterious words which, which result in gibberish ...
- The Bit Blit algorithm dates back to Xerox PARC, but was famously used to sell the Amiga home computer among others.
- Characteristically ahead of his time, Clive Sinclair built his version of the iPad, back in the late '80's.
- See the Steve and Sir Martyn playing the game on our chemistry channel (Periodic Videos): Links ...
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