In my previous writeups I tried to combine the technical aspects, the historical notes and the “war story” into something pleasurable to read. This time I feel that the ingredients would not amalgamate well, so I have created more distinctly separated sections. I warmly suggest you to skip anything does not match your taste: if you only want the entertaining parts, check out the comic and then follow to the guided tour. Otherwise, use the TOC table to navigate to the sections that pick your curiosity, or jump to the TL;DR. Whatever you choose, I promise that this writeup is entirely out of my pen: I cannot guarantee it will suit your taste, but you’ll not be reading AI slop.
IBM had already built document processing machines that interacted with their。新收录的资料是该领域的重要参考
Kevin Church/BBC News,详情可参考新收录的资料
SSIM (Structural Similarity Index Measure) compares two images by evaluating luminance, contrast, and structural patterns across local windows. It returns a score from -1 to 1: 1.0 means the images are pixel-identical, 0 means no structural correlation, and negative values mean the images are anti-correlated (less alike than random noise). For glyph comparison, it answers the question: do these two rendered characters share the same visual structure?