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I am also Chinese and AI user. Manus is excellent, and it's hard to find a rival when it comes to making PPTs. The effect of wild search is exaggerated. The hype from official accounts is one thing, and the overwhelming scam comments on social media are another; neither is accurate. It has been almost a year. If Manus were really as simple as just getting Open Manus up and running, we should have seen many similar products. But unfortunately, there's only one Manus.


While embeddings are generally not required in the context of code, I am interested in how they perform in the legal and regulatory domain, where documents are substantially longer. Specifically, how do embeddings compare with approaches such as ripgrep in terms of effectiveness?


Not long ago I came across this book in an HN thread about AI and the future. The moment I saw the title, I knew I had to read it. Crypto, AI, collective intelligence — it hits all the right notes for me.


I'm a beginner user. My current agent is built using Java. I'm hesitant whether to use Python to call the api for evaluation or to introduce some tools into the Java project for evaluation, such as those related to OpenTelemetry.


You can evaluate with your programming language of choice.


Delete generated audio, then generate a new one using customized prompt.


This one is really very interesting. I will take reading it as a kind of enjoyment.


Tried agno. Its API has less mental burden than langchain. As for the speed advantage, it hasn't been noticed much.


Journey to the West was very popular on Chinese TV in the 80s-90s, and almost everyone watched it more than once. The game was promoted for four years, and in the end it presented much more than what was shown in the PV. The story of the GUAI, the animation between the chapters, this is a love letter to one generation (maybe two). Beside, at present, China's economic environment is not good, and I would like to call this sales volume China's lipstick effect.(A $500 ps5 then you are good to go).


I'm having a few snags with Bloomberg.

However I do get to read your comment and I suspect that what you write is quite complicated and involved.

Would you mind defining G_U_A_I and C_N lipstick effect. Feel free to use convoluted terminology.


hhh GUAI is the Chinese pronunciation of monster/yokai. Game Science retains this appellation in the game.(Black Bear Guai for example, it's a Black Bear Monster actually) The lipstick effect in China means that people are turning to cheap entertainment, such as games. I used a translation tool, sorry for the unclear expression.


I understand now. Thank you. There is no requirement to separate capital letters with _.

"lipstick effect". I understand your explanation but the phrase is still unclear. If I had to guess: lipstick is a Western affectation and so are computer games. All nations have sayings that range from mildly unpleasant to outright racism and inflammatory. The lipstick effect sounds like "mildly offensive".

I wish you all the best and I hope this translates correctly 8)



I'm from a city in central China, where Starbucks is a great place to talk because it's located around a mall, and unlike other stores, the seating is less crowded, but if I want to study or get quiet to do something, I'll choose the library or a less lively local café.


I am currently living in Japan after living my whole life in the United States. I have noticed Japanese Starbucks are much more generous with the space and seating, and generally are wonderful places to socialize/study/work. Additionally, I wonder if it is related to the prevalence of malls and their popularity. In the US, malls are almost universally graveyards, whereas in Japan every Aeon Mall I've ever visited has been full even on weekdays.


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