enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Chegg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chegg

    Chegg announced that it would launch a GPT-4 powered AI platform called Cheggmate later in May 2023. [23] By June, CheggMate was in testing mode, but wasn't expected to publicly launch until 2024. [24] As of 2025, it has not been released. By November 2024, Chegg's stock price had fallen 99%, primarily because of competition from ChatGPT. [25]

  3. Minecraft modding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minecraft_modding

    The popularity of Minecraft mods has been credited for helping Minecraft become one of the best-selling video games of all time. The first Minecraft mods worked by decompiling and modifying the Java source code of the game. The original version of the game, now called Minecraft: Java Edition, is still modded this way, but with more advanced tools.

  4. Mojang Studios - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mojang_Studios

    Markus Persson founded Mojang Studios in 2009.. Mojang Studios was founded by Markus Persson, a Swedish independent video game designer and programmer, in 2009. [3] [4] He had gained interest in video games at an early age, playing The Bard's Tale and several pirated games on his father's Commodore 128 home computer, and learned to programme at age eight with help from his sister.

  5. Minetest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minetest

    Luanti (formerly and colloquially Minetest) is a free and open-source voxel game creation system.It is written primarily in C++ and makes use of the Irrlicht Engine. Luanti has a Lua API allowing users to write their own games and mods.

  6. Minesweeper (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minesweeper_(video_game)

    A won expert game of KMines, a free and open-source variant of Minesweeper. Minesweeper is a logic puzzle video game genre generally played on personal computers. The game features a grid of clickable tiles, with hidden "mines" (depicted as naval mines in the original game) scattered throughout the board. The objective is to clear the board ...

  7. Pseudorandom number generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudorandom_number_generator

    It can be shown that if is a pseudo-random number generator for the uniform distribution on (,) and if is the CDF of some given probability distribution , then is a pseudo-random number generator for , where : (,) is the percentile of , i.e. ():= {: ()}. Intuitively, an arbitrary distribution can be simulated from a simulation of the standard ...

  8. Pseudorandom generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudorandom_generator

    In theoretical computer science and cryptography, a pseudorandom generator (PRG) for a class of statistical tests is a deterministic procedure that maps a random seed to a longer pseudorandom string such that no statistical test in the class can distinguish between the output of the generator and the uniform distribution.

  9. Linear congruential generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linear_congruential_generator

    The second row is the same generator with a seed of 3, which produces a cycle of length 2. Using a = 4 and c = 1 (bottom row) gives a cycle length of 9 with any seed in [0, 8]. A linear congruential generator (LCG) is an algorithm that yields a sequence of pseudo-randomized numbers calculated with a discontinuous piecewise linear equation.