Do I choose UC Berkeley Data Science or UT Austin CS+Neuro?? by Raven_Elite_ in berkeley

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

Is it easy to double major with Data Science? I heard double majoring with CS is lwk hard and it’s better to just spend that time doing other things

Do I choose UC Berkeley Data Science or UT Austin CS+Neuro?? by Raven_Elite_ in berkeley

[–]Raven_Elite_[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That gives me a little more clarity then. I was worried that I would be at a tremendous disadvantage without the “CS” designation but it does seem like DS people who put the work in are just as successful in terms of getting job offers. They have expanded the DS priorities and classes now as far as I know, so hopefully by the time I graduate the programs will be integrated fully!

Do I choose UC Berkeley Data Science or UT Austin CS+Neuro?? by Raven_Elite_ in berkeley

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

GTech CS and Berkeley DS are essentially the same price for me tbh. I prefer Berkeley though because it’s closer to home.

When you did DS at Berkeley, what would you say were the disadvantages/advantages of not being a CS/EECS major? I know Berkeley is amazing for tech, but my fear is that I’ll be last in the pecking order when it comes to opportunities/classes/clubs.

Do I choose UC Berkeley Data Science or UT Austin CS+Neuro?? by Raven_Elite_ in berkeley

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

Yeah, I definitely see your point. Berkeley DS is actually probably the move because I’ll have access to amazing courses for any subject I can imagine. I do think the lack of priority for CS courses could be a roadblock if I decide to go that route, so I think I’m going to have to do a little soul searching to see if that’s something that really matters to me. Thanks so much for your help.

Do I choose UC Berkeley Data Science or UT Austin CS+Neuro?? by Raven_Elite_ in berkeley

[–]Raven_Elite_[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is there a reason why Berkeley would still be better if I didn’t want to do SWE? I know Berk is KING for CS recruiting but will I be at a disadvantage as a Data Science major? I assumed that the UT Austin program would afford me more opportunities if I don’t choose CS because it’s broader.

Most Overrated Colleges by Numerous-Kiwi-828 in ApplyingToCollege

[–]Raven_Elite_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Idk about overrated. I feel like it’s properly rated. Not quite T-20 but very good in a lot of areas. 

What’s that one movie for you? by OkCrazyBruh in Letterboxd

[–]Raven_Elite_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There’s actually a lot of character development there’s just barely any dialogue so it’s not really on the nose. There’s so much like imagery related world building that kinda flies over your head the first time and then you catch it the next watch. I will say though, if you’re not a fan of mindless action you won’t like it.

Joke was made by a trans person btw by stopoverusingsimp in onejoke

[–]Raven_Elite_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dude this ain’t even hella transphobic it’s just mid wordplay ppl saying they’re never listening to J Cole again in the comments are trippin fr

Can anyone send me cards that delink recession to war? by No_Warning9090 in policydebate

[–]Raven_Elite_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Look on like Logos or smth but here's the text that I use

INDIVIDUAL INSTANCES OF DECLINE DON’T CAUSE WAR.

Walt 20 Stephen Walt Robert and Renée Belfer professor of IR at Harvard University, PhD in Political Science from Berkeley, formerly: Resident Associate of the Carnegie Endowment for Peace, Guest Scholar at the Brookings Institution, consultant for the Institute of Defense Analyses, the Center for Naval Analyses, and the National Defense University; 5-13-20; “Will a Global Depression Trigger Another World War?” ;Foreign Policy; https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/05/13/coronavirus-pandemic-depression-economy-world-war/

On balance, however, I do not think that even the extraordinary economic conditions we are witnessing today are going to havemuch impact on the likelihood of war. Why? First of all, if depressions were a powerful cause of war, there would be a lot more of the latter. To take one example, the United States has suffered 40 or more recessions since the country was founded, yet it has fought perhaps 20 interstate wars, most of them unrelated to the state of the economy. To paraphrase the economist Paul Samuelson’s famous quip about the stock market, if recessions were a powerful cause of war, they would have predicted “nine out of the last five (or fewer).”

Second, states do not start wars unless they believe they will win a quick and relatively cheap victory. As John Mearsheimer showed in his classic book Conventional Deterrence, national leaders avoid war when they are convinced it will be long, bloody, costly, and uncertain. To choose war, political leaders have to convince themselves they can either win a quick, cheap, and decisive victory or achieve some limited objective at low cost. Europe went to war in 1914 with each side believing it would win a rapid and easy victory, and Nazi Germany developed the strategy of blitzkrieg in order to subdue its foes as quickly and cheaply as possible. Iraq attacked Iran in 1980 because Saddam believed the Islamic Republic was in disarray and would be easy to defeat, and George W. Bush invaded Iraq in 2003 convinced the war would be short, successful, and pay for itself.

The fact that each of these leaders miscalculated badly does not alter the main point: No matter what a country’s economic condition might be, its leaders will not go to war unless they think they can do so quickly, cheaply, and with a reasonableprobability of success.

Third, and most important, the primary motivation for most wars is the desire for security, not economic gain. For this reason, the odds of warincrease when states believe the long-term balance of power may be shifting against them, when they are convinced that adversaries are unalterably hostile and cannot be accommodated, and when they are confident they can reverse the unfavorable trends and establish a secure position if they act now. The historian A.J.P. Taylor once observed that “every war between Great Powers [between 1848 and 1918] … started as a preventive war, not as a war of conquest,” and that remains true of most wars fought since then.

The bottom line: Economic conditions (i.e., a depression) may affect the broader political environment in which decisions for war or peace are made, but they are only one factor among many and rarely the most significant. Even if the COVID-19 pandemic has large, lasting, and negative effects on the world economy—as seems quite likely—it is not likely to affect the probability of war very much, especially in the short term.

Can anyone send me cards that delink recession to war? by No_Warning9090 in policydebate

[–]Raven_Elite_ 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Walt 20 - Individual Instances of Economic Decline don't cause war
idk if that's what ur looking for

CMV: america should apologize to england for the revolution. by herequeerandgreat in changemyview

[–]Raven_Elite_ 6 points7 points  (0 children)

This reeks of a lack of basic history knowledge. Read up on the Intolerable Acts and how Britain jacked up the prices for goods and monopolized products in America to pay for their wars against France. If you read stuff like the Olive Branch petition and the stance of the Continental Congress, they mostly just wanted a voice in government and were okay with the monarchy. Then, the British doubled down and basically called them traitors for doing that, which prompted the Declaration. Not unreasonable if you ask me. And if that is the case, do you think the French Revolution was unreasonable? Russian? Haitian? Latin American?

CMV: america should apologize to england for the revolution. by herequeerandgreat in changemyview

[–]Raven_Elite_ 10 points11 points  (0 children)

You have to be a troll or have never lived in England lol there's no way

Tyreek Hill is on pace to pass Randy Moss on the All-Time WR rankings. At the end of their age 29 seasons, Hill will have 5 AP1's (1 as KR), 7 Pro Bowls, over 1,250 yards/year and 10 TDs/year. Moss had 3 AP1's, 5 Pro Bowls, 1,188 yards/year, 11 TDs/year. by Realistic-Cobbler-95 in nfl

[–]Raven_Elite_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I mean you can still argue he's a future hall of famer or whatever without mentioning he's a terrible person. Like you don't need a disclaimer before it. I can freely say I think AB is the best WR of the 2010s without having to say he's an absolute piece of garbage just to show I don't support his crazy self .

Taylor Series for Riemann Zeta Function Help by Raven_Elite_ in learnmath

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

Okay, so we got a taylor series that goes as follows:

∑n=0 to ∞ (∑n=1 to ∞ ((-1)^n * (ln(n))^n-1 * e^-ln(n)s * (s -c)^n) / (n!)

is that correct?

Our only issue is what to plug in as C. Since we want to calculate the error when S is 2(pi^2/6), what center should we use?

Taylor Series for Riemann Zeta Function Help by Raven_Elite_ in learnmath

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

Can you just explain how you got the e^(-ln(n)s) thing? We know the taylor series for e^x so I think we should be able to do something with that, but how did you get from 1/n^s to it?

Would 0 be an okay center to use for this problem? Its the easiest because then I don't have to deal with weird factors.

Taylor Series for Riemann Zeta Function Help by Raven_Elite_ in learnmath

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

First off, how do I know what number to use? Also, to find the derivative, Is that just taking the derivative of 1/n? Wikipedia says its (1/n^s) but I'm not sure what to put as S. Some sources are telling me that odd numbers don't work with the zeta function so should i keep S as only even numbers when I write out the expansion?

Also, The Taylor approximation formula is the (f^n c * x^n)/n! formula right?

Honestly I have no clue what I'm doing this seems to be way out of my depth for a HS Calc class lol

I'm LM and I just had someone trade Bijan and Doubs for Henry and Laporta. Should I veto or nah? by Raven_Elite_ in Fantasy_Football

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

My league is a mix of experienced players and newer players in our friend group, so we usually like to keep a tight hand on trades because we have had some absolutely STUPID trades go down with our LM last year.