week 9
'Fortnite: Battle Royale': Where To Go To Follow The Treasure Map Found In Haunted Hills
The Week 9 challenges are live in Fortnite: Battle Royale and we're moving quickly towards the end of Season 4. As usual, we've got some non-combat challenges in the mix, and this week the list asks us to follow the treasure map found in Haunted Hills. As usual, there are two ways to go about this: you can either drop into the cemetery, find the map and start looking for this thing yourself, or you can use a little bit of guidance if you're stuck. If you're looking for where you need to go to follow the treasure map found in Haunted Hills, check out our guide and map below. For the rest of the Week 9 challenges and how to solve them, click here. To start with, you'll need the map. It's located in Haunted Hills, which is towards the shore in the Northwestern part of the map.
Here's How To Visit The Center Of 4 Named Locations In A Single Match In 'Fortnite: Battle Royale'
Here's how to visit 4 named locations in a single match in'Fortnite: Battle Royale.' Fortnite's Season 4, Week 9 challenges have officially landed, and one of the trickier challenges this week is visiting the center of four named locations in a single match. A named location in Fortnite: Battle Royale is any location on the map that's actually called something. So Dusty Divot, Tilted Towers, Greasy Grove and Moisty Mires all qualify as named locations, whereas the soccer stadium and prison do not. Visiting these is no big deal at all, but visiting the center of four named locations in a single match is another matter. Like visiting the center of three storm circles in a single match, this challenge could prove frustrating.
BMW Machine Learning Weekly -- Week 9 – Towards Data Science
News about Machine Learning (ML), Artificial Intelligence (AI) and related research areas. Controlling your gadgets by talking to them is so 2018. In the future, you will not even have to move your lips. A prototype device called AlterEgo, created by Arnav Kapur, a 23-year old MIT Media Lab graduate student, is already making this possible. With Kapur's device -- a 3-D-printed plastic doodad that looks kind of like a skinny white banana attached to the side of his head -- he can flip through TV channels, change the colors of lightbulbs, make expert chess moves, solve complicated arithmetic problems, and order a pizza, all without saying a word or lifting a finger.
[TGE] Week 9: working with ICORating and publishing in Merkle.
The GraphGrail Ai team actively worked with ICORating to form an adequate and independent rating of the project. In the course of the work, important issues related to blockchain, the economy of the token, the reserve fund, and many other directions were clarified and explained to potential investors. The team clarified that the purpose of the ICO is to build its infrastructure and self-sustained ecosystem. At the same time, the basis of the platform will be a token economy designed to regulate the relationship between market participants. In the near future, ICORating will form an official document on the basis of the answers provided by the GraphGrail Ai team.
Machine Learning - WAYR (What Are You Reading) - Week 9 • /r/MachineLearning
This is a place to share machine learning research papers, journals, and articles that you're reading this week. If it relates to what you're researching, by all means elaborate and give us your insight, otherwise it could just be an interesting paper you've read. Please try to provide some insight from your understanding and please don't post things which are present in wiki. Preferably you should link the arxiv page (not the PDF, you can easily access the PDF from the summary page but not the other way around) or any other pertinent links.