I Put a Neural Network in a Thermometer — Then I Found Out It Never Ran.
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The confession I wrote the original article in May, about a thermometer I'd built around an ATtiny85, an AD620 instrumentation amp, and a thermistor — one that had already been running for a while on a straightforward degree-3 polynomial correction. At some point I wondered whether inference could do better than the polynomial, so I put Hasaki to work on it. And to be fair to it: it did work. That part isn't the confession. What happened next is. Once inference was running, I started noticing a…
1Key Takeaways
- The confession I wrote the original article in May, about a thermometer I'd built around an ATtiny85, an AD620 instrumentation amp, and a thermistor — one that had already been running for a while on a straightforward degree-3 polynomial correction.
- At some point I wondered whether inference could do better than the polynomial, so I put Hasaki to work on it.
- Once inference was running, I started noticing a….
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3Why it matters
Coding AI shifts how fast software ships and how much human review each change needs. DEV — ML reports that the confession I wrote the original article in May, about a thermometer I'd built around an ATtiny85, an AD620 instrumentation amp, and a thermistor — one that had already been running for a while on a straightforward degree-3 polynomial correction.
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