Haptic Rendering – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Haptics, often associated with video game controllers, are systems that provide a touch sensation for users, but how do we calculate the forces involved? Associate Professor of Robotics and Autonomous Systems Dr Ayse Kucukyilmaz is based at the University of Nottingham. Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and exciting…

Vector Search with LLMs – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and exciting career opportunities) at: https://jane-st.co/computerphile This video was filmed and edited by Sean Riley. Computerphile is a sister project to Brady Haran’s Numberphile. More at https://www.bradyharanblog.com

Coding a Guitar Sound in C – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Signal processing is just mathematics, so lets code a guitar sound in C. Dave Domminney Fowler continues the Digital Signal Processing conversation to show how your favourite tunes all rely on DSP. Find out more from Dave at @domminney Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and exciting career opportunities)…

Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) – Computerphile

From Computerphile. A checksum that’s robust & trivial to compute with Matt Godbolt — Check out Brilliant’s courses and start for free at https://brilliant.org/computerphile/ (episode sponsor) — More links in full description below ↓↓↓ Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and exciting career opportunities) at: https://jane-st.co/computerphile This video was filmed and…

Bad Bot Problem – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Following a report on the situation with Social Media and bots, Lewis Stuart of University of Nottingham is inspired to see just how easy it is to fire up his own botnet and puts them to work on a fake social media site: ‘scroll hole.’ Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more…

Digital Signal Processing With Audio Data – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Demonstrating that you can filter data to smooth out the numbers, but whether it’s weather data, stock market information or Taylor Swift, the math is the same! David Domminney Fowler takes us through it. Find out more from Dave at https://www.youtube.com/c/DavidDomminneyFowler Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and exciting…

Network Basics – Transport Layer and User Datagram Protocol Explained – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Breaking the network layer model into pieces, starting top-down, Richard G Clegg of Queen Mary University London explains the ‘bargain bucket’ of networking! Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and exciting career opportunities) at: https://jane-st.co/computerphile This video was filmed and edited by Sean Riley. Computerphile is a sister project…

Implementing Passkeys in Practice – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Build your own passkey system like Mike! — Check out Brilliant for free at https://brilliant.org/computerphile/ (30-day free trial and 20% discount on premium subscription… episode sponsor) — More links in full description below ↓↓↓ Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and exciting career opportunities) at: https://jane-st.co/computerphile This video was…

LLMs and Newcomb’s Problem – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Newcomb’s Problem is a thought experiment which, on the surface, seems obvious, but what if you’re trying it out on your identical twin? Which choice is best? Aric Floyd demonstrates it, then tries it on Anthropic’s Claude, which doesn’t always play ball! Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and…

The Return of Festive Flashing Lights – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Steve gets all festive and tries to improve on the festive lights he built a mere 11 years ago… Dr Steve Bagley is based at the University of Nottingham. Computerphile is supported by Jane Street. Learn more about them (and exciting career opportunities) at: https://jane-st.co/computerphile This video was filmed and edited by Sean…

How Passkeys Work – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Passkey pop up everywhere, Mike Pound explains what they are! Check out Brilliant’s courses and start for free at https://brilliant.org/computerphile/ (episode sponsor) — More links in full description below ↓↓↓ Dr Mike Pound is based at the University of Nottingham. This video was previously titled "What is a Passkey?" Computerphile is supported by…

Gen AI & Reinforcement Learning- Computerphile

From Computerphile. The real-world doesn’t graph well. Sydney Von Arx discusses GenAI & RL — See Jane Street’s training programs in New York, London or Hong Kong at https://jane-st.co/hkginternship26-computerphile (channel sponsor) — More links in full description below ↓↓↓ Sydney Von Arx of METR talks about an approach to solve Reinforcement Learning & gradient descent…

Procedural Generation in Games – Computerphile

From Computerphile. Procedural generation is the idea of using simple rules to generate more complicated items – used in games such as Minecraft and Elite, Zac Garby of the University of Nottingham explains with the use of the game Carcassonne. Zac would like to thank user mlin92 for the graphics used in his generation code.…