The Kelvin (K; and not "degree Kelvin," just "Kelvin") is the standard unit of absolute temperature.
Where I currently am, it's a comfortable 285.37 K. Sun's out, no clouds, not much wind.
The Kelvin (K; and not "degree Kelvin," just "Kelvin") is the standard unit of absolute temperature.
Where I currently am, it's a comfortable 285.37 K. Sun's out, no clouds, not much wind.
NEURAL PROCESSING UNITS (NPU): THE FUTURE OF AI COMPUTING
Neural Processing Units (NPUs) are specialized chips that accelerate AI tasks efficiently. Discover how they power mobile AI, IoT devices, autonomous vehicles, and the future of AI computing.
Read More: https://blog.harislab.tech/articles/neural-processing-units-npu-the-future-of-ai-computing
#articles #Neural #Processing #Units #NPU #Future #Computing
Decisions over units have never been easy.
Is a pasty not just a European Commission-endorsed foodstuff, but a much-needed unit of mass? Or is it an ideal way of signifying radial measurements AND a cunning way of preventing inadvertent chafing?
For the confused (and I was as well, the running hashtag is there for a reason)
https://www.theregister.com/2025/12/19/pasty_standard/
https://www.theregister.com/Design/page/reg-standards-converter.html
#Units #Standardisation #Innovation #ThePasty #Running #Pasty #Cornwall
Ich schreibe meine Inhalte mit typst und bin etwas über Typographie gestolpert. Immer wenn ich Einheiten benutze, dann schreibe ich z.B. "9m" und nicht "9 m". Natürlich ist "9 m" richtig. Natürlich mit einem geschützten Leerzeichen dazwischen, damit das nicht durch einen Zeilenumbruch getrennt wird. Ich wollte mir dafür eine Funktion bauen. Jetzt könnte ich die Gelegenheit nutzen, um das automatisch umzurechnen. Beispiel:
Bewegungsrate: #units(9, unit: meter) würde dann Bewegungsrate: 9 m / 30 ft. ergeben. Ist das hilfreich?
David Kras - Units (Original Mix)

How do people that use imperial units enter measurements in software apps? Assume you have a length that's 3 inches and 5/16. How do you enter that value in an app that expects a normal number? Do you use a calculator to first divide 5/16 to get 0,3125 and then enter 3.3125? Or do you have some assistive technologies that understand fractions? Or do you just enter "3 5/16" and hope the app can parse it?