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《TechBeat》:利用AssemblyAI和LLM Gateway构建实时医疗转录分析应用(2026年4月11日)

2026-04-11 14:11:27

How are you, hacker? 🪐Want to know what's trending right now?: The Techbeat by HackerNoon has got you covered with fresh content from our trending stories of the day! Set email preference here. ## Want to Have Successful OpenTelemetry Projects? Implement This One Tip By @nfrankel [ 4 Min read ] In this post, I want to tackle a real-world use case and describe which tools you can leverage to reduce the necessary changes. Read More.

Your AI Has Root Access to Your Life. You Just Don't Know It Yet.

By @sirfederick [ 3 Min read ] The tools are getting smarter. The containers they run in haven't changed since 2015. Read More.

Microsoft Generative AI Report: The 40 Most Disrupted Jobs & The 40 Most Secure Jobs

By @botbeat [ 21 Min read ] Discover the 40 jobs most vulnerable to gen AI & 40 most secure professions, based on an empirical Microsoft Research study of 200,000 real-world interactions. Read More.

Don’t Buy the Wrong MacBook Pro: The M5 Trap Apple Won’t Mention

By @aschwabe [ 4 Min read ] The M5 Pro is the only chip built for the 14-inch MacBook Pro's thermal envelope — everything else throttles, is a generation behind, or has no fan at all. Read More.

I Ran a Token Project for 3 Years. Here Is What Actually Happened.

By @koichihatta [ 6 Min read ] I launched a token project in 2022, watched it reach $6M liquidity, and watched it fail. Three years of a full market cycle and what I built differently. Read More.

The 10 Best Skins in Mortal Kombat 1

By @joseh [ 5 Min read ] Sareena's holiday costume, Reptile's Earthrealm costume, and Scorpion's MKX costume are some of the best skins in Mortal Kombat 1. Read More.

Privacy Isn’t a Feature, It’s an Obligation

By @tudoracheabogdan [ 9 Min read ] Privacy isn't optional. See how we built with per-user AES-256 encryption, private AI inference, and custom security review skills to protect relationships. Read More.

Why Do SwiftUI Apps “Stutter”?

By @unspected13 [ 15 Min read ] Learn how SwiftUI's Attribute Graph works under the hood. Understand re-evaluate vs re-draw, invalidation, and proven optimization techniques with code examples Read More.

Build a real-time medical transcription analysis app with AssemblyAI and LLM Gateway

By @assemblyai [ 14 Min read ] AI medical transcription converts doctor-patient conversations into accurate clinical notes, streamlining documentation for healthcare providers. Read More.

The Search Experience on pkg.go.dev: How It Works

By @Go [ 2 Min read ] Search results for packages in the same module are now grouped together. The most relevant package for the search request is highlighted. Read More.

Qwen3.5-9b-uncensored-hauhaucs-Aggressive Model: A Beginner's Guide to Get You Started

By @aimodels44 [ 2 Min read ] Qwen3.5-9B-Uncensored-HauhauCS-Aggressive is an uncensored variant of the base Qwen3.5-9B model created by HauhauCS. Read More.

Stop Editing WordPress in Production: A Complete Guide to Staging Workflows

By @davidshusterman [ 7 Min read ] Learn how to set up a WordPress staging workflow that prevents production disasters. Covers tools, database sync, testing, and deployment best practices. Read More.

Over 50 Tested Tips for Claude Cowork: Everything From Plugins to Sub-Agents and More

By @withattitude [ 8 Min read ] What works, what breaks, and how to make Claude Cowork genuinely useful in 2026. Read More.

From RAG to Instant Knowledge Acquisition: Giving Market-aware Agents Access to the Live Market

By @federicotrotta [ 6 Min read ] RAG uses known docs. Market-aware agents ​​need live web evidence. Learn instant ​​knowledge acquisition and how it ​​enables accurate outputs. Read More.

Voxtral-4B-TTS-2603 Brings Fast, Multilingual Voice AI to Production

By @aimodels44 [ 2 Min read ] This is a simplified guide to an AI model called Voxtral-4B-TTS-2603 [https://www.aimodels.fyi/models/huggingFace/voxtral-4b-tts-2603-mistralai?utm_source=ha… Read More.

The Invisible Broken Clock in AI Video Generation

By @aimodels44 [ 9 Min read ] This is a Plain English Papers summary of a research paper called The Pulse of Motion: Measuring Physical Frame Rate from Visual Dynamics [https://www.aimode… Read More.

OpenClaw Advanced Tutorial: From Intermediate to Expert in One Guide

By @xiji [ 6 Min read ] OpenClaw is a powerful AI chat tool that lets you control your agent from the command line. Read More.

Proof of Usefulness Weight Distribution

By @proofofusefulness [ 4 Min read ] Why each Proof of Usefulness criterion receives its specific weight — and where the weights came from. Read More.

Qwen3.5-35B-A3B Uncensored Guide: Features, Capabilities, and Setup

By @aimodels44 [ 2 Min read ] Explore Qwen3.5-35B-A3B Uncensored, a multimodal AI model with no refusals, advanced reasoning, and support for local deployment. Read More.

Zeta-2 Turns Code Edits Into Context-Aware Rewrite Suggestions

By @aimodels44 [ 2 Min read ] This is a simplified guide to an AI model called zeta-2 [https://www.aimodels.fyi/models/huggingFace/zeta-2-zed-industries?utmsource=hackernoon&utmmedium=r… Read More. 🧑‍💻 What happened in your world this week? It's been said that writing can help consolidate technical knowledge, establish credibility, and contribute to emerging community standards. Feeling stuck? We got you covered ⬇️⬇️⬇️ ANSWER THESE GREATEST INTERVIEW QUESTIONS OF ALL TIME We hope you enjoy this worth of free reading material. Feel free to forward this email to a nerdy friend who'll love you for it. See you on Planet Internet! With love, The HackerNoon Team ✌️

具有自主性的AI或将打破传统就业替代规则

2026-04-11 11:59:59

A new paper argues agentic AI threatens entire job workflows, making old task-based automation models too weak to capture the real risk.

《蝙蝠侠:阿卡姆骑士》——所有阿卡姆章节排名

2026-04-11 10:47:51

I’ve been revisiting Batman: Arkham Knight, and I’ve forgotten how much I loved the game. I also forgot how much the Batmobile plays a crucial part in the whole game, like immensely. But anyway, I’ve also gone back and replayed the DLC. This game had a lot of it, including 6 Arkham episodes, each featuring a different member of the Bat Family (plus Harley). Let’s take a look at all of them and rank them from least good to good.

\ Side note: I enjoy all of the Arkham episodes, and I don’t believe any of them can be categorized as “bad.” However, some are just better than others. So, without further ado, here are the Batman: Arkham Knight Arkham episodes ranked.

The Batman: Arkham Knight Arkham Episodes Ranked

6. A Flip of a Coin

5. GCPD Lockdown

4. A Matter of Family

3. Harley Quinn

2. Catwoman’s Revenge

1. Red Hood

6. A Flip of a Coin

https://arkhamcity.fandom.com/wiki/A_Flip_of_a_Coin

No disrespect to Tim Drake, but throughout the Arkham games, he never really interested me. In fairness, the series never really gave him a lot to work with, so it was nice to see a whole Arkham episode dedicated to him.

\ A Flip of a Coin sees Robin go up against Two-Face in a short but fun episode. His gameplay isn’t experimental or anything like that; he plays very similarly to Batman. But playing as Batman is a ton of fun, so that isn’t a complaint.

\ The thing that I didn’t enjoy, however, was the story itself. The entire time, Robin is self-doubting himself and wondering if he’s up to the task of filling in Batman’s shoes. Oracle then has to reassure him. That’s kind of the entire story of the episode, which leaves a lot to be desired. Again, fun gameplay, but the story could’ve been better.

5. GCPD Lockdown

https://arkhamcity.fandom.com/wiki/GCPD_Lockdown

From the current Robin to the original one. In GCPD Lockdown, Nightwing has to make sure that Penguin doesn’t escape from police custody.

\ This episode doesn’t have a ton of story beats; it kind of just focuses on Nightwing’s mission to stop the Penguin. However, playing as Nightwing feels a bit different than playing as Batman or Robin, so it’s fun to have to change up your playstyle. Also, the combination of playing as Nightwing, while talking to Lucius Fox, and also listening to Penguin’s squaking, makes for a fun time.

4. A Matter of Family

https://store.steampowered.com/app/313102/Batman_Arkham_Knight__A_Matter_of_Family/

Throughout the series, we only ever see Barbara Gordon as the tech specialist, Oracle. So, it was great to see her in her Batgirl days.

\ We see her (and Robin) go toe-to-toe against The Joker and Harley Quinn as the two heroes race to save Commissioner Gordon and his fellow officers. To make matters worse, The Joker has them holed up in an amusement park, which ups the creepy factor.

\ We’ve seen the Bat Family save hostages all the time; that’s not anything special. What sets this apart, however, is that Batgirl has to save her own father from the homicidal hands of two of the most dangerous criminals in Gotham. That family connection ups the stakes and makes this story twice as good. Even though, because this episode is a prequel, you know nothing will happen to our heroes, it will still have you on the edge of your seat.

3. Harley Quinn Episode

https://arkhamcity.fandom.com/wiki/Harley_Quinn_Story_Pack

Harley Quinn has always been shown to be devoted to The Joker. But who is she really? What’s going through her mind? These are the questions that were brought up in the Harley Quinn episode. As she tries to help Poison Ivy escape from police custody, we learn more about her and the way she thinks.

\ We find out that her original version, Harleen Quinzel, still talks to her and tries to get her to do the right thing. This episode shows us a completely different side of the character, and it would’ve been nice to see more of this in the main story.

\ Playing as Harley Quinn is also very entertaining, as she has more of a loud, aggressive playstyle, completely different from The Batman. Overall, this episode is amazing, and one of the ones I replayed the most.

2. Catwoman’s Revenge

https://store.steampowered.com/app/401630/Batman_Arkham_Knight__Catwomans_Revenge/

I know a lot of people don’t like doing The Riddler’s side mission; they find it tedious to have to do all the challenges and collect all the Riddle trophies. Personally, I liked it. I think what makes it more enjoyable for me is that I like The Riddler’s character and his dynamic with Batman. I also like seeing Catwoman’s own dynamic with Batman. So, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that I really enjoyed the episode that featured both of them in the spotlight.

\ In Catwoman’s Revenge, Catwoman takes revenge on The Riddler for kidnapping her and strapping a bomb to her neck. Catwoman’s witty as ever, and The Riddler is amusingly annoying as always. The banter between the two is exceptional, and I haven’t even begun talking about the gameplay yet. It’s challenging but fun. It’s a bit more difficult than the other episodes, but it isn’t impossible.

\ Catwoman’s Revenge is one of the best Arkham episodes in the game. My only wish is that it were longer.

1. Red Hood Episode

https://arkhamcity.fandom.com/wiki/Red_Hood_Story_Pack

I said that Harley Quinn’s style is different from Batman’s; that’s true. However, there’s nothing more different than just straight-up shooting your enemies. That’s exactly what Red Hood does in his Arkham episode.

\ He’s on a hell-bent mission to take down Black Mask, and he will stop at nothing to take down his target, no matter how many henchmen he has to shoot. Red Hood’s style is so vastly different from anyone else we play as in the Arkham series that this episode immediately stands out as the most unique.

\ Everything works in this episode: the gameplay, the story, the hero and villain, all of it. The Red Hood episode is the best Arkham episode in Batman: Arkham Knight, and I would’ve loved to see a full-fledged Red Hood game from Rocksteady Studios. Maybe we’ll see one in the future, eventually.

Read More

\ Feature image source

机器学习面临的是信任问题,而非人才短缺问题

2026-04-11 10:15:10

Machine learning is not struggling because the world lacks smart people.

It is struggling because the world still does not fully trust what these systems are doing.

That is an uncomfortable thing to admit, especially after years of excitement around AI, data science, and model innovation. We have more talent than ever. More engineers are learning ML. More companies are building with it. More tools are available. More startups are promising that machine learning can optimize, predict, classify, automate, and transform almost everything.

And yet, even with all of that progress, a quiet problem keeps slowing the whole space down.

People do not always trust the output.

They do not trust how the model reached its conclusion. They do not trust whether the data was clean. They do not trust whether the system will behave the same way tomorrow. They do not trust whether bias is hiding inside the logic. They do not trust whether the result is truly intelligent or just statistically convincing.

That trust gap matters more than many people in tech want to admit.

Because in machine learning, talent can build a system. But trust is what allows people to actually use it.

\

The Industry Has No Shortage of Talent

There was a time when machine learning talent was rare and expensive in a way that made the field feel almost inaccessible. Only big labs, top research teams, and well-funded companies could really compete. The tooling was harder, the infrastructure was more limited, and the knowledge barrier was higher.

That era has changed.

Today, there are more courses, frameworks, open-source libraries, pretrained models, and cloud tools than ever before. A small team can build something that would have looked impossible a few years ago. Students can train models on laptops. Founders can plug machine learning into products much faster. Even non-experts can now experiment with ML-powered workflows.

So when people say machine learning is being held back because there are not enough talented people, that explanation feels less convincing than it used to.

The deeper issue is not whether we can build models.

It is whether people believe those models deserve a place in decisions that matter.

That is a very different problem.

\

Accuracy Alone Does Not Create Confidence

One of the most common mistakes in machine learning culture is assuming that better performance numbers automatically solve adoption problems.

But people do not trust systems just because a dashboard says the accuracy has improved by three percent.

A team can present a model with strong metrics, beautiful charts, and a confident demo. Everyone in the room nods. The prototype looks impressive. The output feels sharp. The technical story sounds convincing.

Then the system touches the real world.

That is where things get messy.

Maybe the model performs well on test data, but becomes inconsistent in production. Maybe edge cases start appearing. Maybe users do not understand why one case was approved and another was rejected. Maybe support teams cannot explain the result. Maybe leadership gets nervous when an important recommendation looks wrong, but no one can clearly explain why it happened.

At that point, it no longer matters how elegant the architecture is.

Trust begins to collapse the moment people feel the system is acting like a black box; they are expected to believe without question.

And that is exactly where many machine learning systems fail.

\

The Black Box Problem Is Still Very Real

The machine learning world often talks as if explainability is a side feature. In reality, it is much closer to a survival requirement.

When a model influences hiring, lending, pricing, healthcare, moderation, fraud detection, customer support, logistics, or business forecasting, people need more than output. They need reasoning they can follow.

Not everyone wants mathematics. Most users do not need the internals of gradient descent or feature embeddings explained to them. But they do need enough clarity to feel that the system is not arbitrary.

That is the heart of the issue.

Trust is not built by making everyone into an ML expert. Trust is built by reducing the distance between model behavior and human understanding.

If a system keeps making decisions that users cannot interpret, then even a strong model starts to feel risky. And once something feels risky, people stop depending on it. They override it. They ignore it. They treat it like a novelty instead of infrastructure.

That is how machine learning gets stuck in the demo stage.

\

Real Businesses Do Not Want Magic

Tech culture sometimes loves mystery a little too much. It celebrates systems that feel almost magical. It rewards products that surprise people. It leans into the idea that the smartest software should seem almost beyond explanation.

But businesses do not really want magic.

They want predictability.

They want tools that behave well under pressure. They want systems that can be monitored, audited, improved, and understood. They want to know what happens when something goes wrong. They want to know who is responsible. They want confidence that the model will not quietly drift into bad decisions while everyone assumes it is still working.

That is why trust matters more than raw ML sophistication.

A slightly less advanced model that is stable, interpretable, and well-governed is often more useful than a brilliant model that no one fully understands and no one feels safe scaling.

This is not a glamorous truth, but it is a practical one.

In the real world, reliability often beats brilliance.

\

Trust Breaks Faster Than It Builds

Another reason machine learning has a trust problem is that trust behaves differently from performance.

Performance can improve steadily over time. Trust does not.

Trust builds slowly, but breaks instantly.

A system may work well for months. Teams may begin relying on it. Users may become comfortable with it. Stakeholders may finally relax. Then one highly visible failure happens, and suddenly all that confidence disappears.

That is especially dangerous in ML because model failures often feel unpredictable to non-technical users. When a human makes a mistake, people usually understand that humans are imperfect. When a machine makes a strange mistake, people often react more strongly because the machine was expected to be objective, consistent, and smart.

A single bad recommendation can raise bigger questions.

What else is it getting wrong? \n How often does this happen? \n Has it been wrong before? \n Why did no one catch it? \n Can we trust it at all?

That chain reaction is hard to stop once it begins.

It is not enough for machine learning systems to be impressive. They have to be dependable enough that mistakes do not destroy the entire relationship.

\

Trust Is Also a Product Design Problem

Many people treat trust in machine learning as purely a technical issue. It is not.

It is also a product problem, a communication problem, and a leadership problem.

A model may be good, but if the interface gives users no context, trust will stay low. A prediction may be useful, but if people cannot see confidence levels, relevant factors, or fallback options, they will hesitate. A system may be powerful, but if teams do not know when to trust it and when to question it, adoption stays fragile.

This is where many ML products still feel immature.

They are built by people who understand models, but not always by people who understand what makes users feel safe.

That gap matters.

A trusted machine learning product does not just generate output. It helps people understand what the output means, how strongly the system believes it, and what to do next.

In other words, good ML products do not just predict. They guide.

\

The Trust Problem Gets Bigger at Scale

Trust issues become even more serious when machine learning moves beyond internal experiments and into systems that affect many people.

At a small scale, teams can manually check outputs. They can correct weird behavior quickly. They can add a human review. They can explain away mistakes as early-stage issues.

At scale, that stops working.

Now the model influences thousands or millions of interactions. Now its mistakes are harder to catch. Now its inconsistencies matter more. Now bias becomes reputational damage. Now, confusion becomes customer frustration. Now internal uncertainty becomes legal, ethical, and operational risk.

That is when the trust problem stops being philosophical and becomes expensive.

And once money, reputation, and public scrutiny are involved, nobody is impressed by a model just because it is technically advanced.

They want proof that it can be trusted under real conditions.

\

Trustworthy ML Looks Less Exciting From the Outside

There is a strange irony in machine learning.

The systems that deserve the most trust often look less dramatic than the ones that get the most attention.

A trustworthy ML system usually comes with constraints, guardrails, monitoring, review processes, retraining discipline, documentation, and clear boundaries. It may not feel flashy. It may not sound revolutionary. It may even seem conservative.

But that is often the point.

Trustworthy systems are designed not just to impress, but to hold up.

That kind of work is less glamorous than launching a bold new model and calling it the future. It involves patience. It involves accountability. It involves admitting that real adoption depends on the boring parts almost as much as the clever parts.

And yet those boring parts are exactly what turn machine learning from an experiment into a dependable layer of a product or business.

\

The Future of ML Will Belong to the Teams That Earn Trust

The next wave of machine learning winners may not be the teams with the most talent. Talent is already everywhere.

The winners will be the teams that understand something deeper: people do not adopt machine learning just because it is powerful. They adopt it because it becomes believable.

That means building systems that are not only accurate but understandable. Not only fast, but accountable. Not only impressive, but dependable.

The ML teams that win long term will treat trust as a core feature, not a secondary concern. They will think about model behavior in production, not just performance in training. They will design for human confidence, not just technical possibility. They will know that machine learning is no longer competing only on intelligence.

It is competing on credibility.

And credibility is harder to fake.

\

Final Thought

Machine learning does not have a talent shortage.

It has a trust shortage.

That is the real bottleneck now.

We already know how to build powerful systems. The harder challenge is building systems people feel safe using repeatedly, seriously, and at scale.

That is what will define the next era of machine learning.

Not who can build the smartest model.

But who can build the one people actually trust?

远程办公的幻想在现实生活中破灭了

2026-04-11 08:44:59

The truth about location-independent work: new cities change your mood, but they do not solve hard design problems or async team friction.

格鲁吉亚的中立地位正成为私营资本面临的风险

2026-04-11 07:59:59

Georgia’s geopolitical shift is raising new risks for private wealth, from sanctions contagion to trapped liquidity and weakening legal protections.