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Testing Google's Antigravity IDE and Gemini 3 with JavaScript Statistical Physics Visualizations

By

ckrapu

6mo ago· 3 min readenInsight

Summary

The article discusses the author's evolving approach to testing large language models, moving from asking about obscure people to using JavaScript-based visualizations of statistical physics. The author is testing Google's new Antigravity IDE and Gemini 3 model on a ferromagnetic simulation, exploring how these tools handle complex scientific visualizations and computational tasks.

Key quotes

· 5 pulled
I like learning about the hidden benchmarks that everyone seems to bring out when a new large language model drops.
Mine used to be asking the model about obscure but well-documented people on the internet like family members or acquaintances in the sciences or with IMDB credits.
Since ~late 2024, most models are nailing that one so it's not as interesting.
Instead, I've moved onto Javascript-based visualizations of statistical physics.
Since Gemini 3 and Google's Antigravity IDE were released recently (and yes, I am aware it is basically Windsurf).
Snippet from the RSS feed
Testing Google's new IDE and top model on a ferromagnetic simulation

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