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Llama and other LLMs

Leo Dutra leodutra

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Llama and other LLMs
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leodutra / hyper.js
Created June 15, 2018 17:33 — forked from coco-napky/hyper.js
Hyper config for git bash in Windows
module.exports = {
config: {
// default font size in pixels for all tabs
fontSize: 12,
// font family with optional fallbacks
fontFamily: 'Menlo, "DejaVu Sans Mono", Consolas, "Lucida Console", monospace',
// terminal cursor background color and opacity (hex, rgb, hsl, hsv, hwb or cmyk)
cursorColor: 'rgba(248,28,229,0.8)',
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leodutra / dedent-template.js
Created June 28, 2018 15:27 — forked from zenparsing/dedent-template.js
Dedenting Template Strings
function dedent(callSite, ...args) {
function format(str) {
let size = -1;
return str.replace(/\n(\s+)/g, (m, m1) => {
if (size < 0)
size = m1.replace(/\t/g, " ").length;

Problem

In Arch Linux mkinitcpio -p linux

shows

Possibly missing firmware for module: aic94xx
 Possibly missing firmware for module: wd719x
@leodutra
leodutra / latency.markdown
Created January 26, 2019 14:13 — forked from hellerbarde/latency.markdown
Latency numbers every programmer should know

Latency numbers every programmer should know

L1 cache reference ......................... 0.5 ns
Branch mispredict ............................ 5 ns
L2 cache reference ........................... 7 ns
Mutex lock/unlock ........................... 25 ns
Main memory reference ...................... 100 ns             
Compress 1K bytes with Zippy ............. 3,000 ns  =   3 µs
Send 2K bytes over 1 Gbps network ....... 20,000 ns  =  20 µs
SSD random read ........................ 150,000 ns  = 150 µs

Read 1 MB sequentially from memory ..... 250,000 ns = 250 µs

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leodutra / index.js
Last active November 5, 2022 23:21 — forked from shospodarets/Chrome headless Puppeteer- capture DOM element screenshot using
Capture DOM elements screenshot using Chrome headless
const puppeteer = require('puppeteer')
// Related Issues:
// 3118 - https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer/issues/3118#issuecomment-417754246
async function main() {
const browser = await puppeteer.launch({
args: ['--start-maximized'],
headless: false,
defaultViewport: null
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leodutra / satoshistreasure.md
Created June 29, 2019 18:30 — forked from johncantrell97/satoshistreasure.md
How I Obtained Satoshi's Treasure Keys 1, 2, and 3 in Minutes

Today (April 16th 2019 at noon) the first major clues to discover key #1 was set to be released in a few cities. A QR code with the words 'orbital' were found at these locations and looked like this: (https://imgur.com/a/6rNmz7T). If you read the QR code with your phone you will be directed to this url: https://satoshistreasure.xyz/k1

At this URL you are prompted to input a passphrase to decrypt the first shard. An obvious first guess was to try the word 'orbital' from the QR code. Not suprisingly this worked! This reveals a congratulations page and presents the first key shard:

ST-0001-a36e904f9431ff6b18079881a20af2b3403b86b4a6bace5f3a6a47e945b95cce937c415bedaad6c86bb86b59f0b1d137442537a8.

Now, we were supposed to wait until April 17th to get clues from the other cities for keys #2 and #3 but that wouldn't stop me from digging around with all the new information we had. All that time "playing" notpron (http://notpron.org/notpron/) years ago was going to help me here.

The first thing I noticed was

@leodutra
leodutra / Office_kms
Created August 28, 2019 05:46 — forked from CHEF-KOCH/KMS_office.cmd
KMS server Windows
cd\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office16
cd\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Office\Office16
cscript OSPP.VBS /sethst:kms.digiboy.ir
cscript OSPP.VBS /actcscript OSPP.VBS /dstatus
slmgr.vbs /ckms
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leodutra / kernel.js
Created November 26, 2019 22:46 — forked from Carreau/kernel.js
A node.js kernel for IPython notebook. You can see the explanation of the ipynb rendered in http://nbviewer.ipython.org
zmq = require("zmq")
fs = require("fs")
var config = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync(process.argv[2]))
var connexion = "tcp://"+config.ip+":"
var shell_conn = connexion+config.shell_port
var pub_conn = connexion+config.iopub_port
var hb_conn = connexion+config.hb_port
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leodutra / ThinkAboutMonads.md
Created January 10, 2020 05:50 — forked from brayoh/ThinkAboutMonads.md
How to think about monads

How to think about Monads

Initially, Monads are the biggest, scariest thing about Functional Programming and especially Haskell. I've used monads for quite some time now, but I didn't have a very good model for what they really are. I read Philip Wadler's paper Monads for functional programming and I still didnt quite see the pattern.

It wasn't until I read the blog post You Could Have Invented Monads! (And Maybe You Already Have.) that I started to see things more clearly.

This is a distillation of those works and most likely an oversimplification in an attempt to make things easier to understand. Nuance can come later. What we need when first learning something is a simple, if inaccurate, model.

This document assumes a beginner's knowledge of pure functional programming and Haskell with some brief encounters of Monads, e.g. [Functors, Applicatives, And