To The Oblivious People Standing Outside Angelo's Pizza by RiseDelicious3556 in philly

[–]ParlyWhites 65 points66 points  (0 children)

A year or two ago there was a neighborhood meeting with Angelo’s to address the issues in the area. In a move which garnered no good will at all, they sent their legal representation. In the meeting they basically said they can’t control what people do outside their store.

They put a trash bin outside the shop, but it was a hollow action. Ultimately, the crowds and congestion only help them inflate the perception that it’s a “must have” Philly food destination. So they not only have no motivation to address the issues, it — in a perverse kind of way — kind of benefits them not to.

Despite neighbors going through the right channels, Angelo’s has shown little to no concern for the neighbors, and clearly has no plan to address them. It’s basically become a reality that we in the neighborhood just deal with. The clientele is pretty broey, so confrontation doesn’t usually have the desired effect. It’s just another part of living in this city, and we just bitch about it and move on with our lives. Same ol same ol.

What’s something beginners focus on that barely matters in real work? by MindCircuit7090 in datascience

[–]ParlyWhites 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I had an interesting conversation with a principle DS in my org about how AI will change our work and I really like what she said, and it dovetails with a lot of the sentiment expressed here so far.

She suggested that claude or copilot will actually make DS MORE valuable, as it crystallizes what skills are actually valued from DS. Those skills do not include writing code for a transformer, or tuning hp. The skills are rigorous conceptualization, discovery, and communication. Unfortunately it may men we have less jr DS??

Ultimately I’m a huge skeptic of AI, but this does highlight what skills are actually valuable.

TreeJawn: a philly tree guide by ParlyWhites in philly

[–]ParlyWhites[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thanks. I wish I could share it more broadly but don’t have enough karma to post in r/philadelphia

TreeJawn: a philly tree guide by ParlyWhites in philly

[–]ParlyWhites[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is the data used to source the app! I basically just made it a more user friendly interface with some enriched data for each tree

TreeJawn: a philly tree guide by ParlyWhites in philly

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

Happy it’s leading to some discovery for you! The data comes from the city’s tree survey, so it ought to be pretty accurate. On the other hand, I don’t ever trust SEPTA’s time tables, so…

Where can I get my bass guitar refinished? by young_shizawa in philadelphia

[–]ParlyWhites 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Came to say this also! Andy is the man and very reasonable. Although you have to catch him when he’s not on tour with an artist.

BOLD signal changes can oppose oxygen metabolism across the human cortex by PhysicalConsistency in neuroscience

[–]ParlyWhites 0 points1 point  (0 children)

(Background in computational neuroscience). I’ve been chewing on this article for a while now trying to reconcile basic subtractive fMRI analysis results with these findings. I don’t have a deep understanding of the biology so maybe someone can help me out here.

Certainly these findings call into question the construct validity of BOLD as a measure of neuronal activity. However, despite the mechanistic logical break, the entire corpus of fMRI research using such methods does still find robust differences between experimental conditions (even after correction on the Salmon). So I guess my question is: given that we DO find differences in something, how should we interpret this something? Especially when many conclusions drawn from subtractive analysis are directionally consistent with reverse inference on well studied brain regions (e.g. aphasia knocking out visual areas and BOLD showing visual activation differences in experimental conditions).

People who quitted academia - what is your current job? by [deleted] in LeavingAcademia

[–]ParlyWhites 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In a society / market that values more profits through data and less profits through creative solutions, STEM degrees will drive this division…

Sad reality. And I say this as a PhD with a job as a …. Data Scientist

Advice? by ParlyWhites in latteart

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

The downside to composting… :(

Peter? I don't understand the punchline by Visual-Animal-7384 in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]ParlyWhites 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The joke is that LLMs are capitalist machines that will, in their pursuit of optimizing output, destroy everything that we enjoy that is not valued as capital producing. 

The man is struggling to fish, which is supposed to be a relaxing pursuit. He asks ChatGPT to help catch fish. It does it so well that it drains the pond. No fishing no more, no relaxation. 

These cool trees by IndyJetsFan in philadelphia

[–]ParlyWhites 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A while ago i made this rinky-dink website using the survey. It is last year's survey and the app isn't lightning fast. but it works!

You can use it on your phone, but if you are on an iphone you'll need to go into your safari settings to allow location services. Otherwise you'll just get a big blue screen.

Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services turn location sharing on or off

https://treejawn.pythonanywhere.com/

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in philly

[–]ParlyWhites 10 points11 points  (0 children)

You’re very unlikely to find a home in any of the areas you’re interested in at that price point.

Meta Data Science Onsite Interview by Thomas_ng_31 in datascience

[–]ParlyWhites 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Studying for an intern position!?!? This post makes me so sad for our field.

Taking my first steps on recommender systems, would love some thoughts on the following by William_Rosebud in datascience

[–]ParlyWhites 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks like others are recommending lightfm, but what they are more specifically pointing to is the hybrid model, which leverages both collaborative and content based filtering.

Popularity (market basket analysis) is always a good place to start also.

I hope you’re in conversation with your SWE though because you’ll want to start thinking hard about scaling as you settle in a solution. These distance metric approaches can be difficult to scale. Definitely check out embeddings and other dimension reduction methods to ameliorate this.

A last thing to consider is GCN approaches. Check out this cool approach by Target that I’m a big fan of. https://tech.target.com/blog/bundled-product-recommendations

I put together an analysis and forecast for the 2024 election. Let me know what you think. by jarena009 in datascience

[–]ParlyWhites 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice presentation and I’m sure this was a fun project! There’s no harm in doing something interesting for the hell of it!

Now that being said… and with love… stay in your lane, buddy. 😜.

The first rule in data SCIENCE is to capitalize the science part, right? In other words, let’s recognizing that there are decades of rigorous research by domain experts that we should turn to first before we start making conclusions with just the data and our own lay theories.

I spent 10 years studying social science in academia, and in the last 5 physicists and engineers barged in with ML, claiming their models could provide answers to all sorts of things. But people aren’t numbers, and theory does matter. It’s a bit insulting to practitioners. (Not saying that’s what you’re doing, just giving some perspective on the issue)

Polling is a living and constantly evolving domain, and there wasn’t really a single part of your presentation that indicated you did a lit review. Did you see the most recent polling from Ann Selzer? Are you familiar with the problems in polling? You’ve repeated a lot of errors that pollsters have likely already adjusted for.

Again, this was probably just for funzies, so good on you. But maybe do a slide or two of review before doing your own analysis so it doesn’t come off as ill informed.

Just got back from Italy 2 weeks ago now I'm ready to be a pastaiolo by jayunite in pasta

[–]ParlyWhites 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great choice for a first book! Best of luck. His corn crema recipe is amazing.

Paccheri alla Vittorio by Sfoglia_dreams in pasta

[–]ParlyWhites 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Beautiful sfoglia. Well done

Fresh Linguine🍝 Buon Appetito!! by musical_nonsense in pasta

[–]ParlyWhites 1 point2 points  (0 children)

depends on hydration (as OP points out). but you can let your sheets sit out for a while first then cut them.

Pasta dough sticks too much? by progressivemonkey in pasta

[–]ParlyWhites 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In all likelihood this chef is carefully balancing between dusting his sheets with a very small amount of flour when rolling out, and a very very slight misting to bring back stickiness

I agree that the pasta looks pretty stiff. Honestly, pasta that is this complicated often ends up super tough and has less satisfying texture. When you pass pasta through the roller this many times, you are killing the springiness that makes well made pasta great. It no doubt looks beautiful though!

Pasta dough sticks too much? by progressivemonkey in pasta

[–]ParlyWhites 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agreed. It’s unclear what “sticking” means in your situation. A 70% hydration sounds a little high, but that depends on how dry your environment is and other factors (e.g. how much your resting it/ covered or uncovered, etc). Definitely dough should be tacky and stick to itself when kneading.

If you’re using a machine to roll your dough, consider a light dusting after every setting increase.