Torch3
  Introduction  

  Documentation  

  Downloads  

  Forum  

  Credits  
Ronan Collobert ()
Release 3.1
August 11, 2004

This is a minor update (bug corrections).
See the ChangeLog.




Torch 3 Vision

A full additional package for machine learning applied to vision applications is now available.
Have a look here.


Downloads

Please, read the installation notes in the documentation section before downloading anything.

Downloads
    Archive     Description
Torch3 src Torch3 for Unix/Linux
Torch3 doc Torch3 documentation
Torch3 win    Torch3 for MS Windows   

Warning!

We strongly encourage you to use from now xmake (a python script designed for Torch) instead of the GNU make software for compiling Torch.

Note that the sources for Unix/Linux and MS Windows are the same... only the packaging method is different.
If for some reasons you want the previous version of Torch, it is still available here.

Short description of packages


Emuos.v1.0 [upd] | FREE – 2027 |

: The project is part of a larger open-source initiative to archive and emulate legacy technology. User Experience and Nostalgia Retro Aesthetics

: Emuos.v1.0 leverages the power of AI to provide intelligent solutions and automate complex processes. This integration not only enhances performance but also paves the way for more sophisticated applications in the future. emuos.v1.0

– Unknown software version “emuos.v1.0” – not found in public repositories. – Potential risk: Unverified origin. : The project is part of a larger

Security and Safety EmuOS runs guest code in user-space processes with minimal privileges and configurable resource limits. Copy-on-write disk modes and read-only image support reduce risk of accidental modification. For running untrusted binaries, additional sandboxing (e.g., using container runtimes or OS-level seccomp filters) is recommended. The project documents best practices and provides safe defaults. – Unknown software version “emuos

– Unknown / Suspicious / Malicious (based on behavior) – Recommend: sandbox detonation or signature scanning before use.

9/10 (Retro Rating). It loses one point only because you cannot physically eject a floppy disk and throw it across the room in frustration. But for everything else, it is a perfect trip back in time.

Imagine a high school class learning about the evolution of the GUI. Instead of watching a YouTube video, students can boot Windows 3.1 in 10 seconds, open File Manager, and understand why hierarchies dominated early computing.