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An inspiration engine for ideas
The Language of Flowers
The text explores the language of flowers, detailing their symbolic meanings, sentiments they represent, and poetic expressions, offering insights into how flowers convey emotions and thoughts throughout history.
ia802204.us.archive.orgTWELVE THESES ON ATTENTION
It explores the concept of true attention, emphasizing its importance for genuine encounters, human relationships, and personal freedom, while discussing the societal challenges and potential sanctuaries needed to cultivate it.
friendsofattention.net2024 Memo
Toolhouse's 2024 memo outlines their mission to develop a personal product generator that empowers users to create custom, personalized 3D objects through the integration of AI and agile production methods.
toolhouse.buildN/A
The content appears to be an encrypted or obfuscated text, possibly involving technical data or coded information, with patterns resembling programming or data structures.
monoskop.orgA practical guide to building agents
Guide to building AI agents using large language models, covering agent definition, use case selection, design components, single/multi-agent orchestration, tool integration, instruction setup, safety guardrails, and deployment best practices.
cdn.openai.comChallenging * Mattering = Meaningful
Exploration of the relationship between challenges, meaning, and personal growth, emphasizing the significance of pursuing difficult endeavors that matter and reframing obstacles as opportunities for strength and development.
blas.comStand Out of Our Light: Freedom and Resistance in the Attention Economy
James Williams analyzes the impact of digital technologies on human attention in the "attention economy," arguing that they often undermine individual freedom and self-regulation by prioritizing engagement over meaningful goals.
cambridge.org
“Top of the page: the title. Title.” Mr. Dickens mused, head down, rubbing his chin whiskers. “Pip, what’s a rare fine title for a novel that happens half in London, half in Paris?” “A—” I ventured. “Yes?” “A Tale,” I went on. “Yes?!” “A Tale of . . . Two Cities?!” “Madame!” Grandma looked up as he spoke. “This boy is a genius!”