NVIDIA Isaac Sim with NVIDIA RTX PRO 4000 Blackwell
NVIDIA Isaac Sim with NVIDIA RTX PRO 4000 Blackwell: My New Robot Playground So, I finally did it. I caved in and bought the NVIDIA RTX PRO 4000 Blackwell GPU for my workstation. And yes, I’ll admit it: the main reason was that I wanted to generate some really big, high‑quality anime images (you know what I mean, lol). But once I got it, I realized this thing is basically a tiny AI supercomputer, and it can run way more than just image generation, like NVIDIA Isaac Sim, which is my go‑to tool for robotics simulation and AI experiments. ...
Run Ollama Locally with a Web UI
Motivation I saw this recently: PewDiePie built his own chat app to run LLMs locally on his machine. And also, I’ve spent countless hours roasting my GPU with AAA games-might as well make it do something useful for a change! Have you ever wanted to play with large language models (LLMs) right on your own computer, without relying on the cloud? Enter Ollama, a nifty open-source tool that lets you run powerful AI models locally! ...
Quick Tutorial: Creating Blogs and Websites with Hugo + Microsoft Azure Blob Storage Account
Motivation Someone came up to me and said, “Let’s make some blogs!” At first, my reaction was … Ok, then, to do that, my instinct was to run the other way. Anything to avoid being trapped in the world of WordPress themes or WIX wizardry. Instead, I dusted off my terminal, grabbed a cup of cocoa, and dove into Hugo-a lightning-fast static site generator that lets me control every pixel. For hosting, no pricey managed platforms, just a trusty Microsoft Azure Blob Storage account, letting me deploy and update with just a push. Now, my blog is blazing fast, totally customizable, and blissfully free of cookie-cutter templates. Who knew building websites could actually be empowering (and kind of fun)? ...
Welcome Aboard
Welcome aboard, monke. Reference: Return to Monke This is MLablogs, my little corner of the internet where experiments and thoughts spill out like half-written code. You’ll find random lab notes, half-finished tech ideas, and the occasional story that slipped past the debug console. Have fun.