GALOGRAM IS KNOWN AS

FULL-SERVICE SOFTWARE

design and development company

LEARN MORECONTACT US

What We Do

Web Application Development

App Development

Product Design

Software And QA Testing

Software And QA Testing

ReactJS Web Application

React Native Mobile Development

Blockchain Products

E-Commerce Application Development

CRM/ERP Development

We build solutions for your everyday problems.

This is what we do in a nutshell

Our main goal is to create innovative product which fits maximum  the requirement of the client and help him to find a better and more efficient way of realization! We are very attentive for each client's desires, propose individual decisions, technologies and products design

100%

RESPONSIBILITY

95%

Punctuality

98%

INNOVATIVENESS

95%

INDIVIDUALITY

Recent works

Discover how we can help you!

Latest news

Straight from our blog
October 17, 2022

Scientists Apparently Taught Brain Cells How to Play Pong

The experiments provide a proof of concept for computers that can one day harness the unique power of the brain, the scientists say. In new research this week, scientists say they’ve been able to teach mice and human brain cells how to play one of the most enduring video games in history: Pong. The novel feat suggests that even neurons on an individual level can learn and exhibit a form of rudimentary sentience, the authors say.

October 4, 2022

Hugging Face and ServiceNow launch BigCode, a project to open source code-generating AI systems

Code-generating systems like DeepMind’s AlphaCode, Amazon’s CodeWhisperer, and OpenAI’s Codex, which powers GitHub’s Copilot service, provide a tantalizing look at what’s possible with AI today within the realm of computer programming. But so far, only a handful of such AI systems have been made freely available to the public and open-sourced — reflecting the commercial incentives of the companies building them. In a bid to change that, AI startup Hugging Face and ServiceNow Research, ServiceNow’s R&D division,

October 3, 2022

Better than JPEG? Researcher discovers that Stable Diffusion can compress images

Lossy compression bypasses text-to-image portions of Stable Diffusion with interesting results. Last week, Swiss software engineer Matthias Bühlmann discovered that the popular image synthesis model Stable Diffusion could compress existing bitmapped images with fewer visual artifacts than JPEG or WebP at high compression ratios, though there are significant caveats. FURTHER READING With Stable Diffusion, you may never believe what you see online again Stable Diffusion is an AI image synthesis model that typically generates images based on text descriptions (called “prompts”).

September 22, 2022

We Spoke With the Last Person Standing in the Floppy Disk Business

Turns out the obsolete floppy is way more in demand than you’d think Tom Persky is the self-proclaimed “last man standing in the floppy disk business.” He is the time-honored founder of floppydisk.com, a US-based company dedicated to the selling and recycling of floppy disks. Other services include disk transfers, a recycling program, and selling used and/or broken floppy disks to artists around the world. All of this makes floppydisk.com a key player in the small yet

September 14, 2022

Intel Teases 6 GHz Raptor Lake at Stock, 8 GHz Overclocking World Record

We’re here in Israel for Intel’s Technology Tour 2022, where the company is sharing new information about its latest products, much of it under embargo until a later date. However, the company did share a slide touting that Raptor Lake is capable of operating at 6GHz at stock settings and that it has set a world overclocking record at 8GHz – obviously with liquid nitrogen (here’s our deep dive on the 13th-Gen Intel processors). Intel also

September 7, 2022

No, you cannot trust third party code without reading it first

For more than a decade I have been thundering against a lot of the bad practices that have permeated the software development industry, one such practice is to blindly trust code when using third-party libraries, frameworks, or packages. For about the same amount of time I have listened to all the reasons why time is money and we need to build something quickly, and we haven’t got the time to do security or X, Y,

September 6, 2022

HOW RESILIENT IS THE NATURAL GAS GRID?

A few years ago, I managed to get myself on a mailing list from a fellow who fancied himself an expert on energy. Actually, it seemed that no area was beyond his expertise and the fact that EVERY EMAIL FROM HIM CAME WITH A SUBJECT LINE IN CAPS WITH A LOT OF EXCLAMATION POINTS!!!! really sealed the deal on his bona fides. One of the facts he liked to tout was that natural gas was

September 6, 2022

Why Does Thinking Hard Make Me So Tired?

In 1998, researchers baked chocolate chip cookies in order to fill a laboratory with the aroma of freshly made treats. Then, they brought people into the lab, and sat them in front of a stack of aforementioned cookies, along with some chocolate candies, and a bowl of red and white radishes. People were put in either the radish group or the sweets group, and told to eat only the food that had been assigned to them, for

February 9, 2022

Lynk satellites connect with thousands of devices

SAN FRANCISCO – Lynk Global satellites have connected with thousands of unmodified smartphones, tablets, internet-of-things devices and vehicles, the Fall Church, Virginia, startup announced Feb. 8. The mobile devices required “zero modifications,” Lynk CEO Charles Miller told SpaceNews. “In fact, these devices did not know they were even participating in our test.” Lynk was testing the ability of its fifth satellite to connect with the company’s own smartphones, when thousands of other devices that lacked terrestrial network

December 1, 2021

World’s first living robots can now reproduce, scientists say

The world’s first living robots — known as “xenobots” — can now reproduce, US scientists have revealed. Details about the robots, created using the heart and skin stem cells from the African clawed frog, were unveiled last year after experiments showed they could move and self-heal. Now, the scientists at Tufts University, the University of Vermont and Harvard who made the xenobots say the tiny blobs can also self-replicate. The results of the new research were published

Top