I'm Urav. I build things with code.
This section auto-updates daily. It features one of my recent commits, or something interesting from my network, or a random gem from the wild. The commit gets roasted by an opinionated AI and rendered as a strange attractor.
Last updated: 2026-01-14
Commit: murtazahr/Sketchguard by @murtazahr Β· 9e41424
Message: "Update run experiments configuration."
Review: This commit elegantly centralizes dataset-specific configurations, slaying hardcoded 'magic numbers' in the process. Adding baseline attack percentages is smart, though the quiet jettisoning of 'celeba' raises more questions about its previous experimental history than this change answers.
Chaos: 45% Β· Mood: #6495ED
What is this?
The Pipeline:
- A GitHub Action runs daily and picks a commit (my own β network β starred repos β fallback)
- The commit diff is fed to Gemini, which produces a witty critique, a chaos score (0-100), and a mood color
- A Lorenz attractor is rendered using these parameters:
- Chaos score β modulates Ο (rho), affecting how chaotic the butterfly looks
- Mood color β tints the gradient from black β color β white
- Commit hash β seeds the initial conditions, so every commit is unique
The Math:
The Lorenz system is a set of differential equations that exhibit deterministic chaos. Small changes in initial conditions produce wildly different trajectories. It's the "butterfly effect", fitting for visualizing commits.
Links:

