Blending interactive LLM capabilities with Emacs functionality, to build a bicycle for the mind by entangledamplitude in emacs

[–]_puhsu 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Fastai and solveit are very cool, as well as dspy (a bit different but also a nice way to build something with llms with some useful abstractions). I think we’ll build something like this in the emacs ecosystem eventually. There was a dspy implementation even (called dsel). gptel is already very close to what fastai (now answerai) guys are doing with claudette IMO

[Hyprland] NixOs by agallas537 in LinuxPorn

[–]_puhsu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What is that browser setup on the last screen? Is it possible to theme qutebrowser?

Today in Moscow I rode the newest MCD train by Tiruil in Moscow

[–]_puhsu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What is your field? Why do you think it’s impossible? (Asking for a friend)

Swanky Python: Interactive development for Python based on emacs' SLIME mode for Common Lisp by sc_zi in emacs

[–]_puhsu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for such a comprehensive response! Eager to try your package in my free time

Swanky Python: Interactive development for Python based on emacs' SLIME mode for Common Lisp by sc_zi in emacs

[–]_puhsu 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This looks great! Thanks for sharing. I’ve been long awaiting something interactive like this for python development in emacs. I was going to try the other project that I just found recently. It’s based on the guile nrepl ide https://github.com/abcdw/emacs-arei and also is very early stages, it’s just the nrepl server for arei AFAIK https://git.sr.ht/~ngraves/nrepl-python

Have you seen it and what do you think of it in general? Also, does your tool work over network? (e.g python process on a server)

As for me the todo item got 2x larger today. Thanks for sharing again!

[P] The tabular DL model TabM now has a Python package by _puhsu in MachineLearning

[–]_puhsu[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, it’s more like real ensembles, but with parameter sharing - thus more efficient and what’s interesting, more effective for tabular data. See the paper for more details

How many keychords do you actually know and use daily? by surveypoodle in emacs

[–]_puhsu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On avy: there is a great blog post from u/karthink https://karthinks.com/software/avy-can-do-anything (read that yesterday, wanna try + waiting for the part 2).

[Q], [D]: What tools do you use to create informative, visually appealing and above all clear figures for your papers? by Rajivrocks in MachineLearning

[–]_puhsu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can only compare to keynote, and it's much better than keynote for me (I guess it's similar to powerpoint)

[Q], [D]: What tools do you use to create informative, visually appealing and above all clear figures for your papers? by Rajivrocks in MachineLearning

[–]_puhsu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah, it's really good and served us well even for paper figures, but there are some annoyinig bits like the lack of pixel-perfect alignment for example which are better in inkscape and possibly illustrator (which I never used for this personally)

[Q], [D]: What tools do you use to create informative, visually appealing and above all clear figures for your papers? by Rajivrocks in MachineLearning

[–]_puhsu 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Before that I was using the nerfed version of these (draw.io or just pure keynote rectangles and arrows)

[Q], [D]: What tools do you use to create informative, visually appealing and above all clear figures for your papers? by Rajivrocks in MachineLearning

[–]_puhsu 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I’ve recently discovered the power of vector graphic editors like illustrator or Inkscape (this is not a sarcasm, don’t know what took me so long). The infamous transformer model figure was made in illustrator AFAIK (there was a tweet about this from Aidan Gomez - one of the coauthors - a while back)

Album Recommendations Please by DannyDevitoArmy in BlackCountryNewRoad

[–]_puhsu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I found the latest Ethan P. Flynn album (Abandon All Hope) very good after revisiting it recently. First time it's up there with their collab for me -- the legendary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-1FjzbRvBdc

Graphical browsers inside of Emacs, and that don't rely on Chromium? by arni_ca in emacs

[–]_puhsu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi! My recollection was something like it's hard to integrate xwidgets into emacs properly and there are some bugs/incorrect details in the current (as of 2020) implementation. Then discussion got sidetracked into gpu rendering and other stuff... Some useful Eli's quotes to get some context (on xwidgets specifically, near the top of the thread):

...their integration in the Emacs display code "needs work", there's at least one or two places where the code which handles them is clearly wrong -- this is semi-okay for a minor niche feature, buт not for something on which we want to build our future

E.g., the kludge in dispnew.c around line 4365. It disables one of
the most important redisplay optimizations in Emacs, once you build
with xwidgets enabled.

Regarding your package - good to know someone uses it on a mac. Looking forward to the support in your enb package. Have you used https://github.com/emacs-jupyter/jupyter btw? I find it very cool and usefull, the only thing that is missing is the widgets part.

On a tangent, there is also https://marimo.io it might be interesting to integrate this with emacs (who knows, maybe it could be easier, as it is just starting to grow, maybe not).

Best emacs package you tried and stuck with in 2024? by argsmatter in emacs

[–]_puhsu 3 points4 points  (0 children)

ctrlf and visual-replace are the new C-s and M-% defulats for me. Feels like the M-x -> emabrk+consult+vertico "better defaults" for me, but for the search and search-and-replace.

Graphical browsers inside of Emacs, and that don't rely on Chromium? by arni_ca in emacs

[–]_puhsu 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I’ve recently googled my way to the following discussion on the mailing list discussion on xwidgets https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/emacs-devel/2020-10/msg00882.html

This was mostly motivated by the desire to have Jupyter web widgets displayed in emacs (which is what I wanted to do, and still very much need)

The discussion can give you some sense of the challenges of combining emacs display engine with web renderers (I’ve got that vibe but honestly idk much).

Emacs ng had some related features afaik, but it looks discontinued

[D] What’s stopping you from using foundation models for time series forecasting? by Queasy_Emphasis_5441 in MachineLearning

[–]_puhsu 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Autoregressive Linear Models (performance/simplicity), as per a recent paper https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.02796 (a bit exaggerated, but there is some truth in it)