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Explore C++ ASTs with New AI Tool on Hacker News
Discover C++ Abstract Syntax Trees with Innovative AI Tool on Hacker News Exploring C++ Abstract Syntax Trees (ASTs) has traditionally been a challenging task f…
Explore Code with Interactive Knowledge Graphs using Lum1104
Graphs that teach > graphs that impress. Turn any code into an interactive knowledge graph you can explore, search, and ask questions about. Works with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Copilot, Gemini CLI, and more.
Google's Genie Simulates Real Streets with Street View Integration
Google DeepMind is integrating Street View with Project Genie to create immersive, interactive world simulations for robotics, gaming, and travel, allowing users to explore environments, weather changes, and rare scenarios.
Explore Files.md: Open-Source Obsidian Alternative
Explore Files.md: An Open Source Obsidian Alternative Files.md is a powerful, open source alternative to Obsidian, designed to organize, write, and manage digit…
GoPro Explores Defense Applications Amid Potential Sale
The action camera maker, like so many other companies these days, is looking to defense applications as it evaluates a possible sale.
Unlocking AI Potential: Explore boxed.github.io
Unlocking AI Potential: A Deep Dive into boxed GitHub.io Artificial Intelligence has revolutionized various sectors, and open source platforms like boxed.github…
AI Tool Lets You Explore Government UFO Files Like Microfilm
AI Tool Lets You Explore Government UFO Files Like Microfilm Exploring UFO Files Made Easy with AI A groundbreaking AI tool now allows users to search through g…
Explore isgithub.online: AI Tool for GitHub Analysis
Discover isgithub.online: Leverage AI for Enhanced GitHub Analytics GitHub has transformed the way developers collaborate and manage their code. However, naviga…
Explore 3D Gaussian Splat Editor: Playcanvas/Supersplat
3D Gaussian Splat Editor
Explore Global AI Compute Clusters with Flop Map
Unlocking Global AI Compute Power with FLOP Map OvervieW Flop Map offers a comprehensive view of global AI compute infrastructure. This essential tool provides …
Explore Light Pollution with Browser-Based AI Simulator
Explore Light Pollution with Browser Based AI Simulator Light pollution, the pervasive glow that obscures the night sky, is a growing concern. To understand and…
Explore Webpage Loading with Interactive AI Tool
Discover Webpage Loading with an Interactive AI Tool Understanding webpage loading is crucial for optimizing user experience and search engine rankings. Website…
AstroGrid: Explore the Universe in 3D Browser
Explore the entire universe in your browser, in real 3D
Explore Agentic AI with Free Interactive Curriculum on AgentSwarms
Hey Everyone, Over the last few months, I noticed a massive gap in how we learn about Agentic AI. There are a million theoretical blog posts and dense whitepapers on RAG, tool calling, and swarms, but almost nowhere to just sit down, run an agent, break it, and see how the prompt and tools interact under the hood. So, I built **AgentSwarms**.fyi It’s a free, interactive curriculum for Agentic AI. Instead of just reading, you run live agents alongside the lessons. **What it covers:** * Prompt engineering & system messages (seeing how temperature and persona change behavior). * RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation) vs. Fine-tuning. * Tool / Function Calling (OpenAI schemas, MCP servers). * Guardrails & HITL (Human-in-the-Loop) for safe deployments. * Multi-Agent Swarms (orchestrators vs. peer-to-peer handoffs). **The Tech/Setup:** You don't need to install anything or provide API keys to start. The "Learn Mode" is completely free and sandboxed. If you want to mess around with your own models, there's a "Build Mode" where you can plug in your own keys (OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, local models, etc.). I’d love for this community to tear it apart. What agent patterns am I missing? Is the observability dashboard actually useful for debugging your traces? Let me know what you think.
AI in Medicine: California's Tech-Driven Healthcare Shift
Hi everyone! My journalism professor is making us write a feature article with multiple interviews. The topic I got is the relationship between the healthcare and technology sectors in California. I am specifically focusing on how the push and pull between these two sectors is driving the rapid corporatization of healthcare. My article is supposed to explore how the expansion of tech-driven healthcare solutions, such as digital health, AI services, and venture-backed hospitals, is contributing to a healthcare system that increasingly puts profits over patient care. My draft is due this weekend, but 2 of my interviews ghosted me, so I need people to interview and some more ideas. If anyone is willing to give me their opinions on their experiences of AI in medicine or any ideas in the comments, that would be amazing. If any doctors or those involved in either sector would be open to being interviewed, please let me know! I would love the opportunity!
Explore Prompt Creatures: Multiplayer AI Coding Battles
Hello r/artificial I built this specifically for Claude Code users - every prompt you run feeds a digital pet called a Prompt Creature. The more you code, the more it evolves: egg → baby → adult → elder. Stop coding long enough and it starves. The multiplayer part is what makes it interesting: there's a shared grid where you can see other Claude Code users' creatures in real time, watch them evolve, and battle them. It's a weirdly fun way to feel the collective activity of everyone grinding away with AI. Works with a local-only mode too if you'd rather not sign up. [https://www.promptcreatures.fun](https://www.promptcreatures.fun) or on Github: [prompt-creatures](https://github.com/FabianAckeret/prompt-creatures) Feedback welcome - still pretty early, but I hope you like it.
Explore AgentSwarms: Free Hands-On Learning for Agentic AI
Explore AgentSwarms: Free Hands On Learning for Agentic AI Discover the Power of Agentic AI with AgentSwarms AgentSwarms is an innovative platform designed to o…
Why People Turn to AI for Art: A Deeper Look
Why do people use AI for art? Before anything, this isn’t about debating whether AI art is “real” art. I’ve already shared my personal take on my last post. This is about something simpler and, I think, more human: why people are drawn to it in the first place. I’ll be honest. I used to mock people who used AI for art. I saw it as a shortcut, a lack of effort, even a lack of creativity. It felt easy to dismiss. But as someone who creates in a different medium, writing novels, I started wondering about the motivation behind it. Not the output, but the “why.” After spending time digging into discussions, patterns, and people’s own explanations, I started noticing something deeper. For many, it ties back to how they grew up. A lot of people didn’t have the freedom to explore creativity as kids. Academic pressure, strict expectations, or environments where only “practical” success mattered often pushed curiosity and artistic exploration aside. For some, even trying to pursue something creative was discouraged or punished. That kind of upbringing doesn’t just disappear. It follows people into adulthood. You end up with individuals who feel disconnected from creativity, not because they lack imagination, but because they were never given space to develop it. Trying to learn a creative skill later in life can feel risky, even uncomfortable, especially when it’s tied to the idea that it might not lead to financial stability. Then something like AI tools shows up. Suddenly, there’s a way to express ideas visually without years of training, without the fear of “wasting time,” and without revisiting that pressure. For some, it’s the first time they can take something from their imagination and actually see it exist. That experience can feel new, almost like rediscovering something they never got to have. So when you see a flood of AI-generated art online, it’s not just about technology. For many people, it’s about access. It’s about finally having a low barrier to expressing something internal. That doesn’t mean everyone using AI has the same background or reasons. But reducing it to “laziness” or “lack of creativity” misses a much bigger picture. In some cases, making fun of people for using these tools ends up hitting something more personal than we realize. Curious to hear what others think. What do you see as the main reasons people turn to AI for art?
Explore AgentSwarms: Free Hands-On Agentic AI Learning
Explore AgentSwarms: Free Hands On Agentic AI Learning Introduction AgentSwarms offers a unique, hands on approach to learning about Agentic AI, providing a fre…
Top AI-Powered Tools: Explore curl for Data Transfer
A command line tool and library for transferring data with URL syntax, supporting DICT, FILE, FTP, FTPS, GOPHER, GOPHERS, HTTP, HTTPS, IMAP, IMAPS, LDAP, LDAPS, MQTT, MQTTS, POP3, POP3S, RTMP, RTMPS, RTSP, SCP, SFTP, SMB, SMBS, SMTP, SMTPS, TELNET, TFTP, WS and WSS. libcurl offers a myriad of powerful features
Explore Thaayam: AI-Guided Tamil Board Game Guide
Thaayam: A Bilingual Guide to the Ancient Tamil Board Game Explore the rich cultural heritage of India with Thaayam , a beloved Tamil board game. Known for its …
Explore Thaayam: AI-Guided Tamil Board Game Guide
Thaayam: A Bilingual Guide to the Ancient Tamil Board Game Explore the rich cultural heritage of India with Thaayam , a beloved Tamil board game. Known for its …