Renaissance
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
strace-ui, Bonsai_term, and the TUI renaissance
We’ve always found strace useful but somewhat hard to work with. Its output is often inscrutable, it’s hard to follow subprocesses or threads, and if you want to filter syscalls you have to rerun the trace with a flag for each one. What you want in debugging is a tool for exploring, refining, etc., but strace can make this difficult.
UP’s green renaissance: A future where growth & nature will thrive
Today, the world is facing the unprecedented challenge of climate change. Rising global temperatures, erratic monsoons, drying rivers, declining groundwater resources, air pollution, and the loss of biodiversity have emerged as serious threats to human life, economic prosperity, and social stability. Floods, droughts, heatwaves, and other extreme weather events are becoming increasingly frequent across different parts of the world.
He Was Satirized on British TV. Now He’s Trump’s Pick to Lead California.
Steve Hilton grabbed headlines when he worked in conservative politics in Britain. His American political renaissance in the California governor’s race has bemused former British colleagues and rivals.
Tess Jaray obituary
Tess Jaray, an influential artist and teacher, has passed away at the age of 88. Her early artistic development was significantly shaped by a trip to Italy in 1960, where she was profoundly affected by the architectural spaces of Renaissance masters like Brunelleschi. Jaray later reflected that understanding how to create space was fundamental to self-definition.
The people who actually want AI to replace humanity
“I want AI to be a tool that allows human flourishing!” exclaimed Brad Carson, a former member of Congress. “There is an option out there where AI is just a tool for us.” The people who actually want AI to replace humanity We need to create a new humanism before the “AI successionists” win.
Trump promised a ‘golden age’ for manufacturing. But jobs and plant construction are way down
Trump promised a ‘golden age’ for manufacturing. But jobs and plant construction are way down ‘It’s not this mushroom cloud of explosive growth,’ one executive said - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments President Donald Trump repeatedly pledged to revive U.S. manufacturing jobs and usher in a “golden age” of American-made goods. But, 16 months into his second term, he’s fallen far short of that goal, according to a new report.
Raphael Lets Loose
Plenty of faces keep you company in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s exhibition “Raphael: Sublime Poetry”—saints and sinners, popes and poets, ladies in posh frocks or nothing at all—but the most disarming is the first to greet you, that of a boy in a fun hat. With a long, straight nose; soft, bright eyes; and an uplifted chin, he carries the wary confidence of a teenage heartthrob. It isn’t just the face that makes you pause.
Today on Sky Sports Racing: Uttoxeter, Lingfield and Ffos Las feature
Today on Sky Sports Racing: Uttoxeter, Lingfield and Ffos Las feature There's plenty of action to enjoy on Sky Sports Racing on Thursday; We initially go jumping, with a seven-race card from Uttoxeter scheduled, before attention turns to Lingfield and Ffos Las on the flat Tuesday 2 June 2026 18:20, UK Sunshine Star will attempt to rediscover her mojo in Thursday evening's feature from Lingfield, live on Sky Sports Racing. 6.10 Lingfield - Unexposed Sunshine Star bids to bounce back Sunshine...
OpenAI wants a trillion-dollar debut. Here's how it stacks up against history's biggest IPOs
OpenAI wants a trillion-dollar debut. Here's how it stacks up against history's biggest IPOs CNA takes a look at the five biggest IPOs in history and how the companies are faring. SINGAPORE: From artificial intelligence giants to private space companies, some of the world's most valuable firms are inching closer to the stock market.
What Dogs See
Dogs follow the direction of a person’s gaze almost as well as another person can—better, in fact, when they are motivated to, because dogs are relentless. They track the movements of our eyeballs to see what we’re looking at so that they can look at it too, and they pester us to look just as attentively at them. When my late golden retriever had something to show me—a ball that had rolled under a fence, a man with an irregular gait—he didn’t always bark.