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sam-2727

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Birdwatch

twitter.github.io
4 points·by sam-2727·4 anni fa·0 comments

The problem of Richard Feynman (2014)

galileospendulum.org
2 points·by sam-2727·4 anni fa·0 comments

Unlocking North Korean songs on a karaoke machine (2020)

northkoreatech.org
2 points·by sam-2727·4 anni fa·0 comments

MIT Adds Artificial Intelligence and Decision Making Major

eecsis.mit.edu
33 points·by sam-2727·4 anni fa·3 comments

Should we trust what Pfizer tells us about its vaccine and omicron?

qz.com
9 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·1 comments

Disrupting the Glupteba Operation

blog.google
36 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·2 comments

What does a guy have to do to get a jaywalking ticket in this town? (2017)

bostonglobe.com
4 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·6 comments

Why Covid vaccines didn’t win a science Nobel this year

nature.com
6 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·5 comments

Einstein's Google Scholar Profile

scholar.google.com
21 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·8 comments

A homeopathy journal accepts a paper that says homeopathy is BS

twitter.com
1 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·0 comments

Using Benford's Law to Detect Bitcoin Manipulation

mindmatters.ai
5 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·2 comments

Combating Spoofed Robocalls with Caller ID Authentication

fcc.gov
1 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·0 comments

Possible Existence of a Neutron (1932)

nature.com
2 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·0 comments

Boom in ships that fly ‘fake’ flags and trash the environment

nature.com
3 points·by sam-2727·5 anni fa·0 comments

comments

sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
The beginning of the conclusion of the original study [1] is worth repeating:

No one should try to reform or rehabilitate the ranking. It is irredeemable. In Colin Diver’s memorable formulation, “Trying to rank institutions of higher education is a little like trying to rank religions or philosophies. The entire enterprise is flawed, not only in detail but also in conception.”

Students are poorly served by rankings. To be sure, they need information when applying to colleges, but rankings provide the wrong information. As many critics have observed, every student has distinctive needs, and what universities offer is far too complex to be projected to a single parameter. These observations may partly reflect the view that the goal of education should be self-discovery and self-fashioning as much as vocational training. Even those who dismiss this view as airy and impractical, however, must acknowledge that any ranking is a composite of factors, not all of which pertain to everyone. A prospective engineering student who chooses the 46th-ranked school over the 47th, for example, would be making a mistake if the advantage of the 46th school is its smaller average class sizes. For small average class sizes are typically the result of offering more upper-level courses in the arts and humanities, which our engineering student likely will not take at all.

[1]: http://www.math.columbia.edu/~thaddeus/ranking/investigation... (section 8)
sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
Anyone have a link to the source journal article? I can't find it.
sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
I think it is pretty standard practice to keep cheating confidential (indeed, I think for a lot of universities professors aren't allowed to publicize student names in incidents of cheating). I understand where you're coming from, but college can be an extremely stressful place that can lead students to do actions they otherwise wouldn't have done (or so goes the typical reasoning from universities).
sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
While it won't be able to image more sharply on its own, JWST can still help to constrain certain factors in their modeling, thus obtaining better images.

See, e.g., https://www.stsci.edu/jwst/phase2-public/2235.pdf (although this was written when there was no image, certainly it would still be useful).
sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
For context: https://thetech.com/2021/11/22/6-4-ai-d-major-proposed
sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
You will likely not have to wait long to see, given that the supreme court is most likely going to strike down affirmative action next year
sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
Here's a picture of the same color suit on the same person in 2015: https://twitter.com/OlegMKS/status/605693958015057921
sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
Yes, but you have more variables than necessary. Why model all the observables independently when you can model the system with one complex wave function?

It's the interaction between variables that is key.
sam-2727
·4 anni fa·discuss
> Can you do QM with just the real valued probability distribution?

You can't. The key fact is that other observables, such as momentum, depend on the complex part of the wave function.
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
1. What do you mean by simulator? The wavelength range/sensitivity of the various instruments has been simulated.

2. I think you use this tool to submit proposals: https://jwst-docs.stsci.edu/jwst-astronomers-proposal-tool-o...

3. They go through a panel to be peer-reviewed and compared to other proposals (similar to how grants are allocated by the government). I'm fairly certain this process also includes review by instrumentation experts. The process is double-blind and the first cycle has already been allocated: https://www.stsci.edu/jwst/science-execution/approved-progra....
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
Press release with more details: https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-s-webb-telescope-rea...
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
Interesting, although I struggle to see how this could be. The collapse (from our point of view, at least) of the wave function is pretty necessary in the math of QM. You can only observe the eigenstates of a wavefunction, which is what collapse is. To me, it seems that other theories are just disputing what the "collapse" fundamentally means. For example, Many Worlds theory (from my admittedly limited understanding) says that the wave function's eigenstates each become the new reality in different universes. Please correct me if I'm wrong here though.
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding some of the philosophical aspects here, but the Copenhagen interpretation seems to just a label for the (now) undisputed basic facts of quantum mechanics, so the "interpretation" part of it seems to be a bit historical now. The Wikipedia page gives the following "principles" of the interpretation:

> Quantum mechanics is intrinsically indeterministic.

> The correspondence principle: in the appropriate limit, quantum theory comes to resemble classical physics and reproduces the classical predictions. The Born rule: the wave function of a system yields probabilities for the outcomes of measurements upon that system.

> Complementarity: certain properties cannot be jointly defined for the same system at the same time. In order to talk about a specific property of a system, that system must be considered within the context of a specific laboratory arrangement. Observable quantities corresponding to mutually exclusive laboratory arrangements cannot be predicted together, but considering multiple such mutually exclusive experiments is necessary to characterize a system.

These are universally accepted facts now (it would be silly for any physical theory to contradict the second one). Even a kind of "out there" theory like many worlds theory (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation) would not dispute these facts (it just reinterprets the indeterminism of quantum mechanics as taking different "branches" in a multiverse). The "interpretation" part of it is a bit historical, as no "interpretation" should contradict these facts (a la Bell's theorem).

Edit: As a philosophy, any "interpretation" built off of these facts is cool, but until you calculate anything, it's essentially useless as a physical theory.
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
I think this is a great idea theoretically, but in reality for most papers I don't want to see the data/underlying code. While it would be great to publish data/code with the paper (in the field I've worked on the most, astronomy, most data is already published with the paper anyways), I don't want/need to look through a notebook with the underlying code of the paper in order to just read the intro/conclusions (and maybe one key methods section). Interactive figures are a great idea, but again, oftentimes I don't really care to interact with the figure, or fiddle stuff around, I just want to know why the paper is important and how I should use its conclusions. The two-column format of most papers is very useful for skimming. So instead I would argue notebooks shouldn't replace papers, but supplement them (as they sometimes do already, in fact, but perhaps journals could make it an actual requirement to create a supplementary notebook).

As the article mentions, scientific fields are gigantic nowadays, and skimming papers is critical when you're citing 100+ references in your paper.
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
An interesting take. You can see the huge gap between infection rates and deaths yourself by just googling "South Africa Coronavirus" and switching between the infection/death plots.

That being said, there is definitely a lag between infection/death (which I think media outlets are being cautious in making such a dramatic take yet, for instance see this CNBC article: https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/09/south-africa-omicron-crisis-...), so we'll see if this holds up.
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
And not just disastrous for James Webb, disastrous for the possibility of future funding of space missions in the near future. Congress would be much more hesitant to fund anything as large as the James Webb in the future if it failed.
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
Reminds me of when the Oracle v. Google case was argued in front of the Supreme Court on a series of metaphors, among other things comparing Java to football teams: https://www.theverge.com/2020/10/9/21506172/oracle-google-ja...
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
In your case, this is because all videos "made for kids" must have comments turned off per YouTube policy: https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/9706180
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
Hmmm... this earlier link seems to work: https://web.archive.org/web/20170723102426/http://www.boston...
sam-2727
·5 anni fa·discuss
(updated for incognito): https://web.archive.org/web/20170723102426/http://www.boston...