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AlexNet Source CodeNow Available |
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In partnership with Google, CHM is excited to announce the public release and long-term preservation of the source code for AlexNet, the neural network that kick-started today’s prevailing approach to AI. Created in 2012 to recognize the contents of photographic images, AlexNet was developed at the University of Toronto by then-graduate students Alex Krizhevsky and Ilya Sutskever and their faculty advisor Geoffrey Hinton. Google eventually acquired the company they started, and a Google team worked with CHM for five years to secure the release. Learn more about AlexNet here. Or, go directly to CHM’s GitHub link to access the open-source code here. |
AlexNet Source Code
Now Available
In partnership with Google, CHM is excited to announce the public release and long-term preservation of the source code for AlexNet, the neural network that kick-started today’s prevailing approach to AI.
Created in 2012 to recognize the contents of photographic images, AlexNet was developed at the University of Toronto by then-graduate students Alex Krizhevsky and Ilya Sutskever and their faculty advisor Geoffrey Hinton. Google eventually acquired the company they started, and a Google team worked with CHM for five years to secure the release.
Learn more about AlexNet here. Or, go directly to CHM’s GitHub link to access the open-source code here.
No offense to anyone but this is nuts:
German seems ok but I don't even need to be a French speaker to tell that whatever he's speaking sounds atrocious and will probably HURT the ears of any French speaking individual.
DIY TV commercials!
DIY game show:
Err how do we know he didn't just use the original photos?Grok now supports editing existing images. Before it could only edit images it generated itself. Played around with it a bit, pretty neat.
Why dubb?So will dubbed series and movies also get facial treatment, so their faces will match the language?