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dash2

8,297 karmajoined 13 tahun yang lalu
Social scientist, hack the occasional R package. My substack: https://wyclif.substack.com. I wrote a book: https://www.wyclifsdust.com. davidhughjones at gmail

Submissions

How to avoid being held up by the labs

siliconcontinent.com
2 points·by dash2·3 hari yang lalu·0 comments

In the Weights

intheweights.com
2 points·by dash2·5 hari yang lalu·0 comments

Academic freedom declined in 50 countries

academic-freedom-index.net
2 points·by dash2·24 hari yang lalu·0 comments

A tutorial on conformal prediction [pdf]

jmlr.csail.mit.edu
3 points·by dash2·bulan lalu·0 comments

Mypaintr: Plot R graphics like a human

hughjonesd.github.io
3 points·by dash2·3 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

I had a stroke in Nepal and this is what I ate while I recovered

pickyglutton.com
2 points·by dash2·4 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Library of Things – tools, technology, and equipment available to borrow

masslibraryofthings.netlify.app
3 points·by dash2·5 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

A slow app to teach the alphabet

hughjonesd.github.io
1 points·by dash2·6 bulan yang lalu·2 comments

Are you vibe-coding an open source project?

2 points·by dash2·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

The Song of the Western Men

trelawnysarmy.org
2 points·by dash2·7 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Why I Wrote Rmlx

hughjonesd.github.io
2 points·by dash2·8 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

R interface to Apple's MLX library

hughjonesd.github.io
22 points·by dash2·8 bulan yang lalu·2 comments

Training AI will take longer than you think

wyclif.substack.com
2 points·by dash2·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

The Answer (1954)

sfshortstories.com
37 points·by dash2·9 bulan yang lalu·23 comments

[untitled]

1 points·by dash2·9 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

Rust's Enterprise Breakthrough Year

rust-trends.com
3 points·by dash2·10 bulan yang lalu·0 comments

comments

dash2
·kemarin·discuss
The paper explicitly mentions Ukraine and that’s a key motivation for its conclusions.
dash2
·kemarin·discuss
> including support for the Zuiki MASCON, a bespoke peripheral for train driving sims.

This just makes me feel so glad to be alive today!
dash2
·kemarin dulu·discuss
How did you do it?
dash2
·kemarin dulu·discuss
This is one of those very common ideas that cannot survive a ten second encounter with the facts: https://ourworldindata.org/working-more-than-ever
dash2
·3 hari yang lalu·discuss
You may be right about the wild take, but I'm an ex-academic, so I am not completely ignorant of what I'm talking about.
dash2
·3 hari yang lalu·discuss
I have a sad reaction to this, which is realising that I simply don’t trust anything that these kind of researchers come up with, because I assume them to be left wing bigots.
dash2
·5 hari yang lalu·discuss
Yeah, calling this an "effect size" is just nonsense, and it is alarming that educational software can get away with such poor statistical practice. I'm hoping this was just a student project.
dash2
·5 hari yang lalu·discuss
I reckon East Anglia has the best beer in England. There are so many great local brewers. Adnams is down the road in Southwold and keep putting out brilliant, innovative beers. Then there's Lacons in Great Yarmouth and a host of small names, from Nene Valley Brewery to Mr Winters. If you're in Norwich, check out the Trafford Arms: it's in a nondescript-looking building which was rebuilt after a WWII bomb, but it has a constantly rotating playlist of brilliant ales and a landlord couple who really know their stuff.
dash2
·7 hari yang lalu·discuss
Presumably the art in a game like that would consist in setting up the world and prompts to make the AI NPCs interesting.
dash2
·7 hari yang lalu·discuss
Actually there’s a literature on whether llms have the standard cognitive biases, via cultural inheritance….
dash2
·7 hari yang lalu·discuss
There are many ways that free and competitive markets can fail other than behavioural economics! Monopoly, informational asymmetry, externalities… All of these are plausibly pervasive.
dash2
·8 hari yang lalu·discuss
Alternative take that was expressed in the other post on this: census data users found DP extremely hard to work with, and viewed it as an imposed solution from the ivory tower. I wonder if any user could chime in on this.
dash2
·8 hari yang lalu·discuss
The authors do address this issue, by reweighting their treatment and control counties on observable covariates. But I agree with you that this isn’t the causally watertight research design that economists usually strive for.

It might be worthwhile using local lightning strikes as an instrument for 3G coverage. Others have done this, but not for fertility afaik. But the lightning strike data costs about $1000.
dash2
·11 hari yang lalu·discuss
I’ve been in cities with inadequate street lighting, and driving in them at night is terrifying. Car lights are not an adequate substitute on a busy road. I agree that in small towns and the country, street lighting is unnecessary.
dash2
·16 hari yang lalu·discuss
Parent’s point was that many many people will get much more than $200 value from the “expensive” model. Sure, a Bihar farmer won’t, but even an Indian software developer may easily do if he or she has Western clients.
dash2
·16 hari yang lalu·discuss
Right, but what I meant was: the other tests that the article says are used for definitively proving discrimination are equally bad, and subject to the same objection. Just substituting “one standard deviation“ or “statistical significance“for “80%“ doesn’t fix the fundamental problem here, which is that there are unmeasured confounders.
dash2
·16 hari yang lalu·discuss
I think the users have clearly delivered the verdict that it is friendlier than base R. Admittedly a low bar. Non R users, which do you prefer:

    foo[foo$bar == “baz”,]

    foo |> filter(bar == “baz”)

?
dash2
·17 hari yang lalu·discuss
Thanks. I read the article:

> Since the 80% test does not involve probability distributions to determine whether the disparity is a “beyond chance” occurrence, it is usually not regarded as a definitive test for adverse impact. Instead, other statistically significance tests, such as the standard deviation analysis, may be used for this purpose.

But then my question recurs: isn’t this a ridiculous way to measure discrimination? It’s assuming that the only thing that differs between the different ethnic applicant pools is their ethnicity, which is essentially never going to be true.
dash2
·17 hari yang lalu·discuss
> To measure adverse impact, we apply the EEOC’s “four-fifths rule,” which flags a position when one group is recommended at less than 80% of the rate of the most-recommended group

That seems like a nonsensical way to measure racial discrimination. What could justify it?
dash2
·17 hari yang lalu·discuss
To be clear, do you think that the appropriate response to Tiananmen Square is to murder policemen out shopping? What is that supposed to achieve?