Sony is offering significant discounts on its large-screen Bravia 9 Series QLED televisions, with markdowns of up to $1,800, according to Wired. The price cuts apply to the 75-inch and 85-inch models, making these high-brightness screens more accessible to consumers.
The 75-inch model is available for $2,198, a $900 discount, while the 85-inch version is priced at $2,998, reflecting an $1,800 reduction, as reported by Wired. These televisions boast a peak brightness of 3,000 nits, as noted by a reviewer from Wired, who observed the screen's performance while watching "Moana." The discounts are available at major retailers like Amazon, Walmart, and Best Buy.
In other news, researchers from Stanford, Nvidia, and Together AI have developed a new technique, called Test-Time Training to Discover (TTT-Discover), that optimizes GPU kernels. This method can optimize a critical GPU kernel to run twice as fast as previous state-of-the-art solutions created by human experts, according to VentureBeat. TTT-Discover allows models to continue training during the inference process, updating their weights for the specific problem.
Meanwhile, a team of US astronomers may have found the first evidence of a dark matter sub-halo near our stellar neighborhood, according to Phys.org. Their findings, published in Physical Review Letters, suggest that this sub-halo is located just beyond our galactic vicinity.
In the entertainment industry, the dark comedy "Damned if You Do," starring Kate Siegel and Harvey Guillén, is set to launch worldwide sales at the upcoming European Film Market in Berlin, according to Variety. Stoic has boarded the project, which will be presented at the EFM.
Finally, the open-source digital workspace "La Suite numérique" was showcased at a recent Hack Days event, as reported by Hacker News. The workspace, built by French government agencies DINUM and ANCT in collaboration with European partners, supports online collaboration and teamwork. The event saw participation from 300 people from 15 countries, including students, researchers, and developers.
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