November 6, 2025Close-up footage of the new humanoid robot Iron by the Chinese electric car company Xpeng that was presented yesterday. After the presentation, journalists were allowed to examine the robot and witness how it walked off the stage again. It was not a human in a robot suit.
November 6, 2025Douglas CirÃaco is a doctor from Ouro Branco in Alagoas, Brazil, known for treating patients without asking for payment. Many of those he helps come from remote areas with little access to medical care. Instead of money, they thank him with simple gifts like fruit, vegetables, eggs, or baked goods.
KerbodynamicX on November 6, 2025 8:09 am Fun fact: In the original Terminator, Skynet had about 100 TFlops of comuputing power. That computing power was exceeded by the RTX 4090, but it still isn’t enough for running full sized LLM models by itself
twalker294 on November 6, 2025 8:13 am Where the hell are we gonna find 4399 more Earths? We’re doomed.
bens2304 on November 6, 2025 8:14 am Modern graphics cards: not just pixels, but portals. That demo’s flexing GPU power like it’s casting spells in 4K.
ActNew5818 on November 6, 2025 8:14 am Modern GPUs out here rendering reality faster than my brain can process breakfast
Mesmeric_Fiend on November 6, 2025 8:14 am Seems like a waste to have that tiny little screen so deep inside there where nobody can see it
Fit_Strain8853 on November 6, 2025 8:32 am Still can’t run 4k60fps native. Frame gen and Dsll is the fake tits of computer graphics
RicabRD on November 6, 2025 8:41 am All the power and all we see is asset flip mobile games on steam for 80+ bucks
MARATXXX on November 6, 2025 8:49 am showing off minecraft for 2011 is a bit misleading. we had already had Crysis by that point.
chowchowbrown on November 6, 2025 8:50 am Original source, Branch Education on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9Z4oGN89MU All the videos are absolute masterpieces at explaining (edit: and visualizing) how modern technology works.
Exa_n on November 6, 2025 8:57 am Fun fact: The most powerful supercomputer of 2004 (NEC Earth Simulator) also had the same 36 teraflops. Imagine what power a gaming pc (or its futuristic equivalent) will have in 50 years…
GodOfCiv on November 6, 2025 9:07 am We must be getting close to the singularity. In TNG Data does 60 trillion computations per second.
16 Comments
Tldw: significantly more powerful
Fun fact: In the original Terminator, Skynet had about 100 TFlops of comuputing power.
That computing power was exceeded by the RTX 4090, but it still isn’t enough for running full sized LLM models by itself
Still overpriced though.
Yes but can those 4400 Earths run Crysis?
Where the hell are we gonna find 4399 more Earths? We’re doomed.
Modern graphics cards: not just pixels, but portals. That demo’s flexing GPU power like it’s casting spells in 4K.
Modern GPUs out here rendering reality faster than my brain can process breakfast
Seems like a waste to have that tiny little screen so deep inside there where nobody can see it
Still can’t run 4k60fps native. Frame gen and Dsll is the fake tits of computer graphics
The irony of this video only having 12 pixels…
All the power and all we see is asset flip mobile games on steam for 80+ bucks
yeah, long multiplication is one operation
showing off minecraft for 2011 is a bit misleading. we had already had Crysis by that point.
Original source, Branch Education on Youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h9Z4oGN89MU
All the videos are absolute masterpieces at explaining (edit: and visualizing) how modern technology works.
Fun fact: The most powerful supercomputer of 2004 (NEC Earth Simulator) also had the same 36 teraflops.
Imagine what power a gaming pc (or its futuristic equivalent) will have in 50 years…
We must be getting close to the singularity. In TNG Data does 60 trillion computations per second.