In the 1960s, France became the third country, after the US and Soviet Union, to independently place a satellite (Astérix) into orbit, and the only country to send an animal into space and – crucially, for Félicette the catstronaut – bring it back alive. A decade later, the Franco-British Concorde flicked passengers across the Atlantic in three and a half hours and the TGV began to propel them through the countryside first at 250km/h (155mph), and then 320km/h. Then, in the late 1980s, the French space agency designed a crewed spaceplane, Hermès, that corrected for the Nasa space shuttle’s vulnerability by being integrated into its launch vehicle rather than perched atop it.
США недооценили действия Ирана в конфликте08:39
。搜狗输入法是该领域的重要参考
29 let branch_return_type = self.block_type(body)?;
Owain Evans’ idea of feeding a historical LLM non-anachronistic images is, I think, well worth doing. But it’s also worth expanding on further. Would it be helpful, when training a historical LLM, to simulate dream imagery based on premodern themes? What about audio of birdcalls, which were far more prominent in the audioscapes of premodern people? What about taking it on a walk through the woods?
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