The pipeline was very similar to icon-to-image above: ask Opus 4.5 to fulfill a long list of constraints with the addition of Python bindings. But there’s another thing that I wanted to test that would be extremely useful if it worked: WebAssembly (WASM) output with wasm-bindgen. Rust code compiled to WASM allows it to be run in any modern web browser with the speed benefits intact: no dependencies needed, and therefore should be future-proof. However, there’s a problem: I would have to design an interface and I am not a front end person, and I say without hyperbole that for me, designing even a simple HTML/CSS/JS front end for a project is more stressful than training an AI. However, Opus 4.5 is able to take general guidelines and get it into something workable: I first told it to use Pico CSS and vanilla JavaScript and that was enough, but then I had an idea to tell it to use shadcn/ui — a minimalistic design framework normally reserved for Web Components — along with screenshots from that website as examples. That also worked.
Now, three researchers at the University of Pennsylvania, Alexander Platt, Daniel N. Harris, and Sarah Tishkoff, have done the converse analysis: examining the X chromosomes of the handful of completed Neanderthal genomes we have. It turns out there's also a strong bias toward modern human sequences there, as well, and the authors interpret that as selective mating, with Neanderthal males showing a strong preference for modern human females and their descendants.
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Phospholipid scrambling at the endoplasmic reticulum is essential for establishing a dynamic equilibrium to maintain cellular homeostasis.。业内人士推荐搜狗输入法2026作为进阶阅读
Anatomist, author and broadcaster Prof Alice Roberts has presented Digging for Britain since it first began
"It blows my mind because you think 'if you just drive 30 minutes down the road, Lancashire is a major hub of manufacturing that's still going on now, people are producing things here'."