This Week I Learned - Week #17 2024
This Week I Learned -
* AutoML tools not only empower people without machine learning expertise to build and use effective models but may also make ML methods available to everyone.
* Enterprise h2oGPTe is a language model that provides information retrieval on internal data, privately hosts LLMs, and secures data so it stays with you.
* In case of Open Source h2oGPT, you own your models: generative and predictive.
* API keys for programmatic access are provided with usage limits
* H2O LLM Studio provides organizations with a no-code fine-tuning framework to make their own custom state-of-the-art LLMs for enterprise applications.
* H2O.ai created first Open Source AI for Enterprise, first .ai domain
* EvalGPT.ai provides a customizable evaluation and validation framework that is model agnostic, allowing for the assessment of various AI models without being tied to a specific one.
* AI Comic Factory allows you to create comics using its AI Comic Generator. You can use AI Comic Factory for commercial purposes as long as you comply with licensing terms. This includes adhering to use-based restrictions and maintaining proper attribution.
* A Google Sheets combo chart show a macronutrients data series as a clustered bar chart and another data series showing Energy in Kilocalories/100g as a line chart. The cost of each packaged breakfast cereal option increases from left to right along the X-axis.
* E-commerce is a $6 trillion global industry - NYT
* Pharmacist Friedrich Sertürner isolated Morphine, an alkaloid found in opium, between 1803 and 1805. It was patented by Merck soon afterward. German pharmaceutical companies' work with morphine and its derivatives found particular success in using them as pain relievers and cough suppressants, with Bayer eventually recognizing the potency of heroin, which was legal in Germany at the time (and until the 1950s, before which it was banned only in Asia and the United States).
* In 1938 Pervitin, a methamphetamine drug newly developed by the Berlin-based Temmler Pharma, was introduced to the civilian marked and quickly became endemic among the German population. It was particularly popular among people who worked night shifts and young recreational drug users, both of whom often stayed awake late into the night, because the drug increased alertness, confidence, concentration, and risk-taking behavior, in addition to reducing sensitivity to pain, hunger, and tiredness. The drug was removed from the medical supplies of East and West Germany in the 1970s and 1980s respectively, and following German reunification it was deemed illegal in the entire country. Today, a different form of the drug, crystal methamphetamine, has become popular throughout Europe and the United States despite governmental prohibition and eradication efforts.
* Condo living...is seen to be elitist; an enclave of privilege that works hard to set itself apart from the other.
* Cocoa prices are at once-in-a-century highs. A rise of over 300% YoY.
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