Wireless Memes

Posts tagged with Wireless

I Love LoRA

I Love LoRA
When she says she loves LoRA and you're thinking about the wireless communication protocol for IoT devices, but she's actually talking about Low-Rank Adaptation for fine-tuning large language models. Classic miscommunication between hardware and AI engineers. For the uninitiated: LoRA (Low-Rank Adaptation) is a technique that lets you fine-tune massive AI models without needing to retrain the entire thing—basically adding a lightweight adapter layer instead of modifying all the weights. It's like modding your game with a 50MB patch instead of redownloading the entire 100GB game. Genius, really. Meanwhile, the other LoRA is a long-range, low-power wireless protocol perfect for sending tiny packets of data across kilometers. Two completely different worlds, same acronym. The tech industry's favorite pastime: reusing abbreviations until nobody knows what anyone's talking about anymore.

It Only Took 8 Years...

It Only Took 8 Years...
Nothing says "tech evolution" quite like Valve contradicting themselves after nearly a decade. In 2017, Gabe Newell confidently declared wireless VR a "solved problem" while showcasing their wired headset. Fast forward to 2025, and suddenly they're like "Fine, we'll just build the wireless adapter ourselves" with that signature Valve time™ energy. The irony is delicious. Eight years to go from "it's solved" to "we're solving it now" is peak Valve – the same company that can't count to 3 for Half-Life but can take their sweet time reinventing what was supposedly already fixed.

Connecting The Past: When Ancient Runes Meet Modern Protocols

Connecting The Past: When Ancient Runes Meet Modern Protocols
The ultimate tech origin story carved in stone! That runestone honors King Harald "Bluetooth" Gormsson, whose nickname inspired the wireless technology we all know and hate when it randomly disconnects during important calls. Fun fact: The Bluetooth symbol () is actually a combination of Harald's initials in Nordic runes (ᚼ and ᛒ). Ericsson putting this at their entrance is like the ancient equivalent of a company flexing their heritage in the most literal way possible. Next up: A stone tablet commemorating the inventor of Wi-Fi, conveniently placed where the signal doesn't reach.