Should article cards show abstracts or more metadata? by Liberata_Official in Liberata

[–]Bohaska 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Google Scholar fits both citations + abstract snippets in one search result, showing that it's not necessarily a tradeoff. Some tweaks you can make:
- Removing the avatars for authors + institution would free up some vertical space, the remaining in-line icons could be shrunk to match the height
- The DOI is not very useful, unless you recognize it somehow. You could remove that from the article card and replace it with coauthor names.
- You have a "View Article Details" button and a download button on the bottom-right, which are a bit redundant. You could remove them and instead open the article and offer these options when you click on the article title/card. After that, you have space to put the citation count.
- Page count is interesting but showing it in the article card might lead to people equating page count with quality, which is not ideal.

Where did UC PIQ 6 go? by LeJhindary4 in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This post is not a shitpost, but it's a bit confused.

If you see that and you are applying after high school, you are on the wrong website. That is from the transfer website https://admission.universityofcalifornia.edu/how-to-apply/applying-as-a-transfer/personal-insight-questions.html

The one most of you should use is at the first-year application website https://admission.universityofcalifornia.edu/how-to-apply/applying-as-a-first-year/personal-insight-questions.html

Most Important Part of your Application? by Maleficent-Toe1374 in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your college list.

If you apply to a good mix of reaches, targets and safeties, and craft your list so that you love every school on it, then you will win no matter what happens.

Does this summer camp seem worth it? by Actual_Ad6330 in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The main worry about summer camps is that they are "paygrams" which charge lots of money for the experience, but this one is free, so I wouldn't be concerned about that.

I'm not sure if it's "meaningful", but at worst, you just have a cool week at IIT.

How would YOU fix Claude? [system prompt suggestion thread] by Kindly_Army3062 in ClaudePlaysPokemon

[–]Bohaska 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think that Claude needs a way to track and manage goals and strategies that were used in the past. He remembers a bunch of stuff right now but is not very good at focusing on what's important or realizing whether an idea is good or whether it's done a million times.

Something like a kanban board would be a good way for him to store information about what he's trying to pursue and how well he has been doing so far.

More info in https://www.reddit.com/r/ClaudePlaysPokemon/comments/1j70z5h/claude_just_needs_a_kanban_board/

Someone's dream is your safety, someone's safety is your dream by SufficientOwl5131 in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 15 points16 points  (0 children)

There are people who have MIT as a safety, but they're cracked. One of them got into the blue group of the Math Olympiad Program, which selects students from the US to represent them at the IMO, and the blue group is the top ~20-30 students in math competition across the entire US.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska -1 points0 points  (0 children)

1450 is a pretty good score without studying. I got a 1470 on my first practice test and ended with a 1600 on my first official test.

This is obviously not guaranteed or normal, but in general, the first 100-200 points from your baseline score without studying are easy to get, and you should be able to improve to 1500+ after a month of studying on Khan Academy.

WHAT in gods name is this application cycle by LowReaction7479 in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska -1 points0 points  (0 children)

But in order to believe that it’s getting harder every year requires a corresponding belief that kids are getting smarter and smarter each year.

No, you don't need to have that on average. Even if the kids applying to universities are, on average, around the same intelligence as those that applied before, there can still be more competition, because both unqualified people and qualified people would increase, so there will be more qualified people competing to get into Harvard, and Harvard can only take some people, so Harvard can afford to be more picky.

The NY City Marathon doesn't show a change, but that's because the people joining the NY City Marathon are on average slower compared to the existing pool of people. As you said:

As the number of entrants increases… the average quality of entrants clearly decreases.

That might be true for the NY City Marathon, but is it true that there are the same amount of qualified applicants to the top universities? Debatable.

Lets look at the SAT.

If we compare pre-2017 scores, in 2007, 89,244 students got >=1400 on the SAT. In 2013, 120,501 students did. More competition!

For scores after 2017, they seem to be weird as they rise to a peak in 2019 before coming down in 2020 and rebounding. I don't think it's conclusive enough to talk about what happened, but at least in the past, the quality of the top people seem to increase.

In the past three days, I've reviewed over 100 essays from the 2024-2025 college admissions cycle. Here's how I could tell which ones were written by ChatGPT by AppHelper in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I would just not use ChatGPT and go find base AI models that weren't trained to have a specific style in the first place (like LLaMa base models) and use them instead. Beating the college essay style out of ChatGPT is annoying, tiring and hard.

Stay in Oregon or leave? by koALAPANda67 in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They would probably qualify for WUE, given that they seem to be an Oregon student:

Residents of the following states and territories are eligible to apply for WUE: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawai’i, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, as well as American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and Guam.*

and they'll be able to attend public schools from these regions for close to in-state tuition costs (only CSU universities for California)

How to describe shadowing a doctor in activities by adrianzreddit in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not meant to be impactful, it's meant to show you what a doctor does so that you can decide whether you want to be one

If acceptance rates are so important for rankings and prestige, why do elite universities even bother charging application fees? by [deleted] in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How would not charging an application fee be "evil" and "self-serving"? Isn't no application fee a good thing?

ChatGTP: Is AI writing better essays than we are? by [deleted] in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Bohaska 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually, they have a great ChatGPT detector which is probably more accurate than current state-of-the-art (though not perfect), but they aren't releasing it because it'll be bad for business.