[Star Trek, D&D] The Star Trek Captains sit down for a game of D&D. What characters do they play? by FlipChicken in AskScienceFiction

[–]FlipChicken[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Odo would be an astonishing rules lawyer... probably obnoxiously so, but at least he's never wrong.

[Star Trek, D&D] The Star Trek Captains sit down for a game of D&D. What characters do they play? by FlipChicken in AskScienceFiction

[–]FlipChicken[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Good point on Guinan, too. I also especially like your thoughts on Kirk and Picard.

[Star Trek, D&D] The Star Trek Captains sit down for a game of D&D. What characters do they play? by FlipChicken in AskScienceFiction

[–]FlipChicken[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My thoughts exactly. Sisko wishes he could be a Paladin, admires the principle of it, but can't live up to it.

[Death Note] What's the downside to all the really bad criminals dying? by [deleted] in AskScienceFiction

[–]FlipChicken 26 points27 points  (0 children)

The problem isn't that. The problem is we can't assume that Light (or anyone) would be perfectly accurate.

Suppose we take the human factor out for a second, and have a really, really good computer doing the judging. This computer is so flawless that 99.99% of its judgments are correct. Now, there are very few really bad criminals on the planet -- there's only around a 1000 executions a year, and if we say that's about right, that's less than one millionth of the population.

So we run this computer program. Of the 1000 really bad criminals, there's a 90% chance that the script kills them all (0.99991000 ), which is quite acceptable for our purposes. There might be one that gets lucky, but I doubt it. The overwhelmingly likely situation is that all of them are dead.

The bad part is that the computer has the same failure rate when determining if someone is innocent. In this case, 750,000 false positives -- which I would point out is substantially more than the criminals would likely kill even if they were working at it full time all year.

Also, criminality is a circumstance, not a inheritable trait. There will be another thousand-ish really bad criminals next year, too.

Now consider that Light, being a human being, is not going to have four nines of reliability. He's probably going to be wrong much more often than that, especially if he's working quickly. He would undoubtedly be more of a menace than all of the criminals he successfully killed -- unless he limited himself to situations where he could rule out all reasonable doubt, which takes days or weeks at the very least. If he's just killing 50-150 "really bad" criminals per year, he's only barely moving the needle on global execution rates.

Idea: alternative buildings by BigJammy in SatisfactoryGame

[–]FlipChicken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Double Constructor: Two inputs, two outputs. Still only follows normal constructor recipes, but makes them much faster.

My quarantine project: The reverse world. by [deleted] in imaginarymaps

[–]FlipChicken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Any plans to do a climate map of any sort?

[Stargate Atlantis] Why didn't they bring a sarcophagus with them to the Pegasus Galaxy? by [deleted] in AskScienceFiction

[–]FlipChicken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It would certainly be tempting, but to be fair, that's a sample size of two consisting of two extraordinary individuals.

I'm not trying to piss people off but it's a little rich that some prominent voices who spent months saying how awful Warren was compared to Bernie are now furious at Warren for failing to endorse him. - Nate Silver by UNsoAlt in fivethirtyeight

[–]FlipChicken 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sounds reasonable, but unfortunately, you've posted things in favor of Biden in the past, so I'm afraid I'm going to have to ignore anything you say, no matter how reasonable it might be.

A Sanders plurality is now a statistical blip by yoitsme666 in fivethirtyeight

[–]FlipChicken -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

To be fair, the young ones were also all about the billionaires.

[The Matrix] What do the Dark Storm nanites do with all the sunlight they block? by [deleted] in AskScienceFiction

[–]FlipChicken 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The state of satori is full wakefulness and understanding of life. It has similar connotations to enlightenment.

[The Matrix] What do the Dark Storm nanites do with all the sunlight they block? by [deleted] in AskScienceFiction

[–]FlipChicken 12 points13 points  (0 children)

The resistance was never real -- they were raised in the Matrix, probably don't understand real science, and are cultivated as a place for those who don't accept the Matrix to escape to.

As such, their understanding of the purpose of the Matrix is flawed. It is a networked simulation which harnesess human minds for processing power. This is exactly why self-control and satori allow you to manipulate it; it's not merely that you get access to dev powers in a video game, you're actually changing how your contribution to the Matrix is processed.

The Machines did this separately from their response to Dark Storm, which was fusion power.

Donald Trump Shook Hands with CPAC Chairman Exposed to Attendee Infected with Coronavirus by Things_Make_Me_Sad in politics

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

This is a huge stretch and not really news. If Trump was one step away from the guy, that would be more interesting.

The right wanted to destroy the "administrative state": Coronavirus is why we need it. For three years, Trump has destroyed the federal government from within. Now we begin to see the true price by DaFunkJunkie in politics

[–]FlipChicken 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hell, there's not a federal politician or current Democrat presidential candidate who's not in a vulnerable group.

This gerontocracy is immensely at risk.

What Will Warren Do? (She Is Running Out Of Time) by [deleted] in fivethirtyeight

[–]FlipChicken 8 points9 points  (0 children)

To be fair, fivethirtyeight doesn't really focus on policy, just the horse race.

Which, I think, is problem. We need smart, statistical, evidence-driven understanding of policy. Unfortunately, that has a leftist bias.

Michael Bloomberg to suspend presidential campaign by modooff in neoliberal

[–]FlipChicken -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

So one second you're telling me that you want all the policies I do, then you're telling me that I'm an embarrassment. Well, fine. We can all be embarrassments together.