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1
Off-Topic / Re: Alertas de saúde
« Última por Kaspov em Hoje às 00:47:24 »
Your All Energy Blockages Will Be Cleared, If You Eat This For 3 Days | William Li

Inner Self

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqRFkQN9W1I
2
Maria habuit parvum agnum...

Lectio I - Latin by the Natural Method, 1st Year

Via Latina

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b36fE-WWhCs


& tb:

Paul McCartney & Wings - Mary Had A Little Lamb (Official Music Video, Remastered)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQryRw2abDE
3
Off-Topic / Re: 🦎 Sardão (Timon lepidus)
« Última por Kaspov em Hoje às 00:34:17 »
Outro primo: Burhinus oedicnemus (Linnaeus, 1758) (Davide Viani in Facebook)
4
Off-Topic / Re: IA - INTELIGÊNCIA ARTIFICIAL
« Última por Kaspov em Hoje às 00:26:49 »
A AI em crescendo:


«AI aids England selection as squad for Pakistan series unveiled

Jon Lewis in training with Lauren BellImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,


Jon Lewis, left, says he first saw the benefits of AI while coaching in the Women's Premier League in India

    Published
    3 May 2024, 11:00 BST

    Updated 9 hours ago

England women's head coach Jon Lewis says he is using artificial intelligence to help with marginal selection decisions.

Lewis, who has named his squad for the two white-ball series against Pakistan later this month, says the use of technology in team selection is something which started in franchise cricket but is becoming increasingly common in the international game.

The technology which England use runs match simulations - about 250,000 per team - to try to work out how line-ups might fare against each other.

However, Lewis said he still uses a "people-first approach" to squad selection, with data playing a supportive role.

"What data can do is give you a really objective view of what could happen and what has happened previously. I think it will help with borderline decisions in terms of selection and match-ups.

“I suppose there’s one selection particularly last year, one period of the Ashes, that we targeted as a team. We saw a real strength in Australia and we matched up our strength to that.

“That worked really, really well and it helped us win the T20 series in particular, which got us back in the Ashes.”

England will play three T20s and three one-day internationals against Pakistan, with the first T20 at Edgbaston on 11 May being televised live on BBC Two and iPlayer.

Left-arm spinner Linsey Smith keeps her place in the T20 squad which beat New Zealand in March and April. However, all-rounder Freya Kemp will play only as a batter as England manage her long-standing back injury.

Opener Tammy Beaumont is only selected in the one-day squad, while Sophia Dunkley has been left out completely as she looks to rediscover some form in domestic cricket.

“These two series against Pakistan give us an opportunity to build, develop and ensure we are in the best place come the World Cup in Bangladesh in September," added Lewis, who stressed Beaumont and Dunkley remain in his thoughts for the World Cup.

Fast bowler Mahika Gaur, 18, is unavailable because of A-Levels but should return later in the summer, when New Zealand visit.

There will be Test Match Special commentary of every match of England's summer - men and women - on BBC Sounds, plus live text commentaries on the BBC Sport website.

    No Balls: The Cricket Podcast - Kate's been team-building, Alex has been buying golf clubs

England T20 squad: Heather Knight (capt; Western Storm), Lauren Bell (Southern Vipers), Maia Bouchier (Southern Vipers), Alice Capsey (South East Stars), Charlie Dean (Southern Vipers), Sophie Ecclestone (Thunder), Lauren Filer (Western Storm), Danielle Gibson (Western Storm), Sarah Glenn (The Blaze), Bess Heath (Northern Diamonds), Amy Jones (Central Sparks), Freya Kemp (Southern Vipers), Nat Sciver-Brunt (The Blaze), Linsey Smith (Southern Vipers), Danielle Wyatt (Southern Vipers).

England ODI squad: Heather Knight (capt; Western Storm), Tammy Beaumont (The Blaze), Lauren Bell (Southern Vipers), Maia Bouchier (Southern Vipers), Alice Capsey (South East Stars), Kate Cross (Thunder), Charlie Dean (Southern Vipers), Sophie Ecclestone (Thunder), Lauren Filer (Western Storm), Sarah Glenn (The Blaze), Amy Jones (Central Sparks), Nat Sciver-Brunt (The Blaze), Danielle Wyatt (Southern Vipers).
'A fascinating revelation' - analysis

by BBC Cricket's Henry Moeran

Detailed analysis of player performance and potential match-ups is nothing new, but using AI for marginal squad selections is a fascinating revelation.

While Jon Lewis was keen to stress the human part of selection will always trump reliance on technology, the fact England can point to the success of AI in helping them win a T20 series is intriguing.

Different coaches will have different approaches, and many will always favour their instinct of player skill and character. Others, though, will be desperate to chase the data – this could be Moneyball 2.0.

A hunch is one thing, but to be able to point to 250,000 simulations to back that up could transform how coaches put together sides.

T20 series v Pakistan fixtures

    11 May: 1st Women’s T20 – Edgbaston, 14:30 BST

    17 May: 2nd Women’s T20 – Northampton, 18:30 BST

    19 May: 3rd Women’s T20 – Headingley, 13:00 BST

ODI series v Pakistan fixtures

    23 May: 1st ODI – Derby, 13:00 BST

    26 May: 2nd ODI – Taunton, 11:00 BST

    29 May: 3rd ODI – Chelmsford, 13:00 BST»


https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/articles/cd13geve50vo
5
Off-Topic / Re: Ténis
« Última por Kaspov em Hoje às 00:24:31 »
O ténis ganha importância no Reino da AS:


«Kasatkina 'given guarantees' on safety of gay players in Saudi

Daria KasatkinaImage source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Daria Kasatkina has won six singles titles on the WTA Tour

Russell Fuller
Tennis correspondent
@russellcfuller

    Published
    29 April 2024

Daria Kasatkina, one of the few openly gay players on the WTA Tour, says she has been “given guarantees” about her safety should she compete in Saudi Arabia.

The 26-year-old is in contention to qualify for the season-ending WTA Finals, which will be staged in Riyadh for the first time this November.

“I’ve been given guarantees that I’m going to be fine,” the world number 11 told BBC Sport when asked whether gay players should feel comfortable taking part.

When questioned at Wimbledon last year, Kasatkina expressed reservations about the Finals going to Saudi Arabia - saying there were “many issues concerning this country”.

But speaking at the Madrid Open after a third-round victory over Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Kasatkina spoke of the benefits of taking the tour’s flagship event to Riyadh on a three-year deal.

“If I qualify, it means that I am top eight in the world - it’s great news for me,” she said.

“We see that the Saudis now are very into the sport, they want to develop the sport. And as long as it gives the opportunity to the people there, and the young kids and the women to actually see the sport - so that they can watch it, they can play it, they can participate in this, I think it’s great.”

    Saudi Arabia to host WTA Finals for next three years
        Published
        4 April

    'WTA Finals in Saudi Arabia would be step backward'
        Published
        25 January

Human Rights Watch told the BBC in December that Saudi courts had convicted people for promoting homosexuality online and added "LGBT people in Saudi Arabia have to practise extreme self-censorship to survive their daily lives".

In response, Arij Almutabagani - the president of the Saudi Tennis Federation - said gay players would not need to act any differently to the way they do in places like Abu Dhabi and Dubai, where WTA tournaments are already staged.

"People can behave the way they want to - there is nothing that says you can or you cannot behave. You just have to understand that every country has its rules and traditions," she said.

"It's the same thing that has happened in Dubai. How do they act in Dubai? We are the same, we are all neighbours. Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, UAE - how would the players behave there?"

WTA chief executive Steve Simon has said representatives of the LGBTQ+ community were included on fact-finding trips to Saudi Arabia, before the deal for the WTA Finals was concluded.

Tunisia’s world number nine Ons Jabeur has also reiterated her support for the Saudi Finals.

“As an Arab woman, I'm very proud some things are moving there in Saudi,” she said in Madrid.

“Like Princess Reema said: you should come to Saudi, be there, and judge yourself.

“For me, it always has been about chances, and going there not just to play tennis matches but to give the opportunity especially for younger women to see their role models and to believe that they can achieve anything.”»


https://www.bbc.com/sport/tennis/articles/ceve4459v7vo
7
Pois, provavelmente, quem dominar a AI, dominará o mundo...   ::)
8
O Povo Unido já foi vencido (e não sabe)


globalismo nunca foi unido!
9
Fenícios grandes navegadores: desenvolveram habilidades de navegação e construção naval avançadas, explorando mares nunca dantes navegados.

nunca tiveram um exercito forte, pois fizeram acordos com os impérios
 da época como a Mesopotâmia, Pérsia, onde eles comercializavam para estes povos e em troca não eram dominados.


desapareceram na europa globalizada!

Os fenícios foram a primeira sociedade a fazer uso extenso, em nível estatal, do alfabeto.




  com tudo isto foram conquistados pela mulher estrangeira!  globalista  esqueceram quem eram


venceram globalistas!
10
Off-Topic / Re: 🦎 Sardão (Timon lepidus)
« Última por Kaspov em 2024-05-03 22:25:53 »
Feio como o caraças!


Eu acho estes bichos bem giros, mas, de gustibus et coloribus non disputandum...   :)


"de gustibus et coloribus non disputandum", in Dicionário Priberam da Língua Portuguesa [em linha], 2008-2024, https://dicionario.priberam.org/de%20gustibus%20et%20coloribus%20non%20disputandum.
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