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How to Create Cross-Platform Mobile Applications with Xamarin
It’s the dream of software developers to write code once and use the same code for multiple projects. This dream has been a reality for quite some time now, but it comes with its own cost of maintenance, testing barriers, and, for worse, a poor user experience. In this article, we are going to explore how to use Xamarin to build cross-platform mobile applications and share the code without compromising other aspects of our project. Xamarin works by sharing code and performing memory allocation. We’re going to dive deep into the Android and iOS platforms, but you can use the same approach for any other platform as well.
By Sara Clover3 years ago in Writers
SyntHesIzed Prompts (SHIP)
Introducing a groundbreaking technique named SyntHesIzed Prompts (SHIP), this paper aims to elevate existing fine-tuning methods. Fine-tuning involves training a pre-trained model on a smaller, task-specific dataset to enhance its applicability for specific tasks. However, a challenge arises when certain classes lack data, making it difficult to effectively train the model for those classes.
By Jackto Oghale3 years ago in Writers
I Joined a Writing Group!
Writing groups. We all hear about how insightful they can be, but how many of us are part of a group that isn't online? I know it's convenient to just log onto Facebook, LinkedIn, or Discord and chat with like-minded writers, along with sharing our work and hoping for reads.
By Amethyst Champagne3 years ago in Writers
Nobel-ling It
It is now a very cold day in January, and there seems to be some talk about the Super Bowl and the eventual winners and losers of the great American grudge match. I really do not care for big sports events, excluding the Stanley Cup (mostly for the joy of seeing the Toronto Maple Leafs once again refuse to accept their pathetic nature and just suffer properly in the regular season). But there is one event that I do look forward to every autumn. This is the Nobel Prize season, a week taken out of October to both disturb and annoy those few who still care.
By Kendall Defoe 4 years ago in Writers


