#compression engines
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The Science Research Diaries of S. Sunkavally, p 656.
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maxshortt · 2 months ago
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Welp, in addition to my latest art-series - I made the desktop versions as well (for 16:9 screens), avaliable for download for free: HERE
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bisexual-engineer-guy · 2 months ago
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IM A FUCKING ENGINEER LETS GOOOO
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My turbo fucking works and I probably almost injured myself with that test but IT FUCKING WORKS! I machined everything except the clear top (currently it's clear resin), and everything will be done in aluminum when my stock arrives. LETS FUCKING GOOOOO. I didn't get the valve more than halfway open this go. It'll be open all the way as soon as I have a good testing rig.....
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emethethe · 5 months ago
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zytes · 2 years ago
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ozone
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reinnins · 1 year ago
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happy new year!!
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killbent · 8 months ago
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Good news, I've added all planned enemies to the game! (Not all enemies shown in the video)
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anheliotrope · 5 months ago
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At my job, I've been working my ass off to figure out some rather arcane issues with our WebGL application going OOM on iOS devices specifically.
I wrote some extensive documentation for my findings and a developer who doesn't have a single iota to do with my task read all of them and told me in the daily that the documentation I wrote was very interesting and enjoyable to read. I rarely interact with this developer, we're in separate teams!
And I was confused, like someone had just smacked me awake from my slumber. "What documents?" When he told me about it was about the iOS stuff I couldn't believe it. It was really flattering.
Sometimes it's difficult to get actual stakeholders to read your documentation, let alone unrelated developers!
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percy-thrills-thrillington · 3 months ago
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You know, I don’t think we pitch enough of a bitch fit about how The Beatles music is still not available in mono on streaming
Personally, I think we should be rioting in the streets about this. I think we should be biting and clawing and killing and maiming
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0x4468c7a6a728 · 10 months ago
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i've gotta program something soon...
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tommygotwrittenoff · 11 months ago
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i need them to put eddie in a coma so he can have his own little coma dream realization
#like can you imagine#maybe he didnt reenlist#maybe hes got that perfect little romantic life he keeps thinking he had with shannon#maybe they stayed in el paso#or the three of them moved to la together when shannons mom got sick#and maybe eddie isnt a firefighter maybe he went into contracting or landscaping because he likes to work with his hands#or maybe he went into nursing because he likes helping people#but hes living a perfect little life with a son and wife and their white picket fence but he cant shake the feeling that something is wrong#he pulls aside for a firetruck on his way to work and something about it makes him feel funny like he misses something#and so he asks shannon when he gets home#hey did i ever apply to the fire academy#and she says no why would you have done that?? as she places a warmed frozen lasagna down on the diner table#he watches chris pick at his plate and swears that chris loved lasagna#and maybe hes out on his lunch break at the park and he hears a woman cry and run to find a man collapsed on the ground and shes panicking#so he tells her to call 911 and he starts compressions#the fire department shows up and hen and chim take his place and he fills them in before stepping back#youre good under pressure buck says from beside him#and eddie just kinda looks at him for a second because#he feels right#this feels right#being right here beside this man with a crooked grin on his face feels right#but eddie just shrugs and says well i was in the army kinda came with the territory#and then bobbys voice crackles through the radio buck i told you to stop flirting on calls get in the truck now#and buck returns an ay ay captain and winks at eddie before hopping in the firetruck#he watches engine 118 drive away and thinks he should be right next to buck in that truck#okay i got carried away but i need it#like there are so many possibilities for eddie coma dream and like#tim listen to me i need you to do think i need eddie to be put into a coma so he can realize that his life now is everything hes needed#me thinks
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cbrmachine · 4 months ago
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CIVIL ENGINEERING LAB EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURER & SUPPLIER
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lesbianslovebts · 1 year ago
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I'm autistic, and my brain can't filter and process sensory input well, so everything is Loud, and sounds trigger my chronic migraines, which makes everything Louder, which triggers another migraine, which...
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snailmakesgames · 1 year ago
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flying through shaderspace ...
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jcmarchi · 1 year ago
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Francis Fan Lee, former professor and interdisciplinary speech processing inventor, dies at 96
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/francis-fan-lee-former-professor-and-interdisciplinary-speech-processing-inventor-dies-at-96/
Francis Fan Lee, former professor and interdisciplinary speech processing inventor, dies at 96
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Francis Fan Lee ’50, SM ’51, PhD ’66, a former professor of MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, died on Jan. 12, some two weeks shy of his 97th birthday.
Born in 1927 in Nanjing, China, to professors Li Rumian and Zhou Huizhan, Lee learned English from his father, a faculty member in the Department of English at the University of Wuhan. Lee’s mastery of the language led to an interpreter position at the U.S. Office of Strategic Services, and eventually a passport and permission from the Chinese government to study in the United States. 
Lee left China via steamship in 1948 to pursue his undergraduate education at MIT. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering in 1950 and 1951, respectively, before going into industry. Around this time, he became reacquainted with a friend he’d known in China, who had since emigrated; he married Teresa Jen Lee, and the two welcomed children Franklin, Elizabeth, Gloria, and Roberta over the next decade. 
During his 10-year industrial career, Lee distinguished himself in roles at Ultrasonic (where he worked on instrument type servomechanisms, circuit design, and a missile simulator), RCA Camden (where he worked on an experimental time-shared digital processor for department store point-of-sale interactions), and UNIVAC Corp. (where he held a variety of roles, culminating in a stint in Philadelphia, planning next-generation computing systems.)
Lee returned to MIT to earn his PhD in 1966, after which he joined the then-Department of Electrical Engineering as an associate professor with tenure, affiliated with the Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE). There, he pursued the subject of his doctoral research: the development of a machine that would read printed text out loud — a tremendously ambitious and complex goal for the time.
Work on the “RLE reading machine,” as it was called, was inherently interdisciplinary, and Lee drew upon the influences of multiple contemporaries, including linguists Morris Halle and Noam Chomsky, and engineer Kenneth Stevens, whose quantal theory of speech production and recognition broke down human speech into discrete, and limited, combinations of sound. One of Lee’s greatest contributions to the machine, which he co-built with Donald Troxel, was a clever and efficient storage system that used root words, prefixes, and suffixes to make the real-time synthesis of half-a-million English words possible, while only requiring about 32,000 words’ worth of storage. The solution was emblematic of Lee’s creative approach to solving complex research problems, an approach which earned him respect and admiration from his colleagues and contemporaries.
In reflection of Lee’s remarkable accomplishments in both industry and building the reading machine, he was promoted to full professor in 1969, just three years after he earned his PhD. Many awards and other recognition followed, including the IEEE Fellowship in 1971 and the Audio Engineering Society Best Paper Award in 1972. Additionally, Lee occupied several important roles within the department, including over a decade spent as the undergraduate advisor. He consistently supported and advocated for more funding to go to ongoing professional education for faculty members, especially those who were no longer junior faculty, identifying ongoing development as an important, but often-overlooked, priority.
Lee’s research work continued to straddle both novel inquiry and practical, commercial application — in 1969, together with Charles Bagnaschi, he founded American Data Sciences, later changing the company’s name to Lexicon Inc. The company specialized in producing devices that expanded on Lee’s work in digital signal compression and expansion: for example, the first commercially available speech compressor and pitch shifter, which was marketed as an educational tool for blind students and those with speech processing disorders. The device, called Varispeech, allowed students to speed up written material without losing pitch — much as modern audiobook listeners speed up their chapters to absorb books at their preferred rate. Later innovations of Lee’s included the Time Compressor Model 1200, which added a film and video component to the speeding-up process, allowing television producers to subtly speed up a movie, sitcom, or advertisement to precisely fill a limited time slot without having to resort to making cuts. For this work, he received an Emmy Award for technical contributions to editing.
In the mid-to-late 1980s, Lee’s influential academic career was brought to a close by a series of deeply personal tragedies, including the 1984 murder of his daughter Roberta, and the subsequent and sudden deaths of his wife, Theresa, and his son, Franklin. Reeling from his losses, Lee ultimately decided to take an early retirement, dedicating his energy to healing. For the next two decades, he would explore the world extensively, a nomadic second chapter that included multiple road trips across the United States in a Volkswagen camper van. He eventually settled in California, where he met his last wife, Ellen, and where his lively intellectual life persisted despite diagnoses of deafness and dementia; as his family recalled, he enjoyed playing games of Scrabble until his final weeks. 
He is survived by his wife Ellen Li; his daughters Elizabeth Lee (David Goya) and Gloria Lee (Matthew Lynaugh); his grandsons Alex, Benjamin, Mason, and Sam; his sister Li Zhong (Lei Tongshen); and family friend Angelique Agbigay. His family have asked that gifts honoring Francis Fan Lee’s life be directed to the Hertz Foundation. 
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bmpmp3 · 1 year ago
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i have really been enjoying gumi's synthv bank a lot but i do really wish she had like a true power vocal mode, the vivid mode adds brightness but i'd love some of the like, openness of some of her old banks
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