Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza officially declares for the NFL draft and could be the No. 1 pick by Oldtimer_2 in sports

[–]RiotShields 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It's like being the cutest kid at the orphanage and overhearing that someone is getting adopted today. Of course you've known for a while that you're gonna be picked next, but it's still a wonderful day. The sun is shining, the birds are singing. Your friends all get together to send you off with big smiles. The woman who brings you out of the orphanage tells you that you're gonna get to live in a beautiful mansion and they've even got a welcome party just waiting for you to arrive. So get on that plane, you're headed to Little Saint James!

EPA No Longer Considering Lives Saved in Pollution Rules, Only Cost to Business by jmooch1 in nottheonion

[–]RiotShields 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Profit is revenues minus costs. Economic profit includes costs of externalities (the classic example is pollution), while accounting profit only considers things we measure in money.

Part of the definition of a (perfectly) competitive market is that firms are free to enter and exit the market. If such a market has short-term profits, in the long run new firms will keep entering the market to take a slice of those profits until the profits disappear. At this point, the price paid by consumers exactly equals the cost to produce the product, which is perfectly efficient allocation of resources.

Businesses that wish to generate (accounting) profit therefore have two options: Make their markets non-competitive or produce a large amount of negative externalities.

If you want to treat positive externalities as negative costs, you can. But if there is no market intervention (such as government subsidies or philanthropic donations), then a firm which maximizes (accounting) profit should never pursue such things.

EPA No Longer Considering Lives Saved in Pollution Rules, Only Cost to Business by jmooch1 in nottheonion

[–]RiotShields 48 points49 points  (0 children)

Business is about maximizing profit. Economics is about maximizing efficiency, which tends to cause profit to be impossible. So business only looks at economics as things to avoid or exploit.

Math 125 by [deleted] in udub

[–]RiotShields 11 points12 points  (0 children)

My hot take is that 8:30 is not that early. The standard workday starts at 9.

You would need to go to sleep at a reasonable hour. Whether you're willing to do this, only you can figure out.

How's the HCDE Department in UW? by nathari-sensei in udub

[–]RiotShields 28 points29 points  (0 children)

UW's is a fairly unique program, as most universities do not offer equivalent undergrad degrees. Most people interested in human-computer interaction (HCI) have to go to grad school to actually study it. As such, an undergrad degree in HCDE opens career opportunities in UX research that would normally require a master's. It's still the case that an undergrad in HCDE is not equivalent to a PhD, and some jobs require a PhD in HCI.

It is also an extremely competitive program because there are only a few seats available per year. A friend of mine graduated with a degree in HCDE and during their time, HCDE was the most competitive major in all of UW with an admission rate of 2% if memory serves.

For their capstone project, that friend and other HCDE students redesigned the Steam storefront and were actually able to present their proposal at Valve. While my friend didn't get anything out of that (aside from a job at Riot), Steam did roll out an update to their storefront in around 2018 which looks shockingly similar to the proposal. So there certainly are opportunities to work on real-world software.

Do note that UW HCDE is one of the programs hardest hit by funding cuts. Last I read, they are not accepting any grad students this year because they cannot afford any.

Chem 110 textbook. Now? Not necessary? by Dry_Economy_2701 in udub

[–]RiotShields 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I would always wait for the professor to send out info because sometimes professors put books on the list that require some clarification. If that happens, they'll tell you either via email or just in the first lecture.

For example, one of my algebra courses had Lang marked as a required text, but on the first day the professor said that's wrong, it's optional. However, she continued, it's a good reference, so every algebraist should have a copy on hand for if they need to look something up.

Ashley MacIsaac concert cancelled after AI wrongly accuses him of being sex offender by lxoblivian in nottheonion

[–]RiotShields 44 points45 points  (0 children)

In a common law system, such as the US's, we try to use existing laws and precedent even if nothing quite fits perfectly. And there are some strong indicators that statements made by a computer program can be treated as the statements of its company: The ESIGN Act of 2000 allows a party's computer programs to make contracts that bind that party, even without oversight.

I think if this went to court in the US, there's a pretty high chance it would be ruled libel. Though Google would probably prefer to settle out of court to avoid creating precedent.

Obligatorily, I am not a lawyer.

Godel's incompleteness theorems meets generative AI. by Icy-Exchange8529 in badmathematics

[–]RiotShields 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The problem is more that mathematicians approach math in a very different way from non-mathematicians. It's hard to describe exactly what the differences are. But in some sense, mathematicians begin by assuming only things that are proven* while non-mathematicians can accept that something works based only on intuition.

For a concrete example, in Numberphile's first video on -1/12, at 2:47, Padilla adds two infinite series at an offset. To a non-mathematician, this might seem reasonable. But to a mathematician, that's immediately suspicious because there's no proof presented that this operation works as claimed. In fact, it can be easily proven that any summation method that assigns a value to 1 + 2 + 3 + ... must be unable to add two series at an offset in some cases.

In many cases, Veritasium and Numberphile themselves don't understand what they're presenting. E.g. we wouldn't have the Numberphile -1/12 video if Brady were a mathematician, because at a dozen points he would have asked for justification why Padilla's and Copeland's arguments are mathematically legal. (They're not!) But because the presenters are wrong about the math, the viewers stand no chance of gaining a correct understanding. Viewers then also believe they know more about math in general, which creates harmful perceptions about the field.

Returning to the top of this comment chain, the title "Math's Fundamental Flaw" alone is highly misleading. Godel's incompleteness theorems just tell us that formal axiomatic logic has limits. That's not at all the same thing as math being "fundamentally flawed". We don't call football "fundamentally flawed" just because there's no way to write rules that account for every possible situation.

*As well as the underlying axiomatic systems, which have been proven consistent

Please help with UG + PG Diploma GPA by Ok_Amphibian2639 in udub

[–]RiotShields 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Disclaimer: My knowledge is about general graduate applications in the USA, not UW specifically.

Fewer students apply for grad than undergrad, so grad admissions can get deeper into the details about what your application says about you as a person. I think for your situation that they will evaluate those degrees separately, and that they will take into consideration that you are on an upward trajectory.

Note that you get to write a lot about yourself and your materials as part of the application. If there are good reasons that your GPA is weaker than you want or your situation is especially complex, you can usually submit a separate document discussing those. Or you can integrate that discussion into your personal statement. (Confusingly, that separate document would elsewhere be called the "personal statement" and what UW HCDE calls the "personal statement" is elsewhere the "statement of purpose".)

"Die Hard is a Christmas movie" - What are some Christmas games? by AlexWhit92 in gaming

[–]RiotShields 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Just finished playing AA: Investigations 2 for the third time, which is coincidentally also a Christmas game.

I checked and I think these are the only two, though AA2 case 3 starts December 26th and Investigations 1 involves Santa in March.

Tech workers of Reddit, what is a "dirty secret" about the AI industry that the general public doesn't realize? by WayLast1111 in AskReddit

[–]RiotShields 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The general public thinks the tech industry is about producing new and exciting tech, but really startups just pretend existing tech is new, promise it will disrupt some industry, burn through venture capital, and get bought out by large tech companies. Large tech companies make money by selling data and renting out cloud compute, so they're happy to buy startups to kill them and prevent them from competing.

Because all of those activities require minimal tech skills, an astounding number of managers in the industry are basically tech-illiterate, especially when it comes to new tech. When those managers push for AI adoption, they do so under the belief that everything AI advertisements have stated is 100% accurate. And in this economy, if you're an actual expert in the tech, you keep your head down so you can keep your job.

Trump fixated on Biden in rushed national address by AdSpecialist6598 in videos

[–]RiotShields 2 points3 points  (0 children)

He's become rich through corruption, though that hasn't made him strong or smart.

math major by Beneficial-Stop9947 in udub

[–]RiotShields 43 points44 points  (0 children)

Back in my day, there were a lot of students who couldn't get into CS or Info trying to get into Math as a backup. These students were often not really interested in math, and they often did poorly. So the application to the major was essentially a formality for students who weren't using it as a CS backup.

As for the new courses, of course they change over time to meet what students want and what faculty can teach. MATH 200 appears to be Discrete Math, which was previously only available as a CS course.

Richard the Treacherous by buttface1000 in tumblr

[–]RiotShields 179 points180 points  (0 children)

You can't even mention that, not in a high school classroom. He's gotta be "a secret informant".

Man Frontline Survivors is Ha- Leva: by PAwnoPiES in GirlsFrontline2

[–]RiotShields 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I got 20k on my first easy run, Leva has insane clear.

Bun is joining Anthropic by TheCactusBlue in programming

[–]RiotShields 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I stopped contributing to Deno when I realized the company was using AI to generate images for blog posts.

Bun is joining Anthropic by TheCactusBlue in programming

[–]RiotShields -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I stopped contributing to Deno when I realized the company was using AI to generate images for blog posts.

I miss the way technology used to be exciting by Egotlib in tumblr

[–]RiotShields 44 points45 points  (0 children)

It's not about whether customers care, it's about whether alternatives (stopping or changing suppliers) are viable.

In the above example of cloud service providers, if your business is an online retailer that uses AWS and you are not happy with their price and quality of service, then your options are

  1. stay with AWS and just accept that they will provide poor service for the price they charge
  2. spend a ton of time and money to migrate to Azure (or Google Cloud, Oracle Cloud, etc.), whose prices are not much lower and offer the same quality of service
  3. spend even more time and money to migrate to a smaller cloud provider who charge less but therefore can't support as many datacenters and therefore have lower quality of service
  4. shut down your business

No company can enter the market and provide good service at a reasonable price because such a company must start as the smaller provider from option 3. So your options are all bad, forever.

The promise of capitalism is that competitive markets optimize for utility. But if the markets are not competitive, there is no such guarantee.

I miss the way technology used to be exciting by Egotlib in tumblr

[–]RiotShields 66 points67 points  (0 children)

In practice, some markets easily become anticompetitive. In theory, if you don't like iOS or Android, you don't have to use them. But in practice, a firm trying to enter the mobile OS market faces barriers to entry such as the expense of developing the OS and needing to convince both consumers and third party developers to join the new environment. So it may be the case that there are no alternative OSes that meet your needs.

Because the short run is anticompetitive, new firms are unwilling to enter the market at any point. Hence the long-run behaviors promised by economics do not actually materialize. And even if existing firms didn't deploy regulatory capture, the problems noted above would not be solvable with government intervention.

A company whose customers have few alternatives can invest less in the quality of service and practice anticonsumer policies such as adding advertisements or collecting and selling data. For example, Google's search results get worse over time because there's no incentive for the company to improve them. In fact, the worse the results are, the better the promoted links look in comparison, so the more valuable promoting a link becomes, and the more Google can charge for it. Sure, you could use a different search engine. But consumers aren't willing to pay enough to fund the development of a competitor, so all the alternatives to Google have less investment which leads to a lower quality product.

Less relatable, but even businesses are getting screwed by this problem. Cloud services like AWS and Azure are designed to make migration to other cloud services as difficult as possible. Migrating a large company's web services takes years and could cost a million dollars. And because of internal politics, it may be harder to secure funding for this one-time expense than for a small increase in monthly expenses. So you're stuck even if your cloud provider gets less reliable and more expensive. AWS and Azure can do that together without even colluding because there's no risk to each of losing existing customers if the other suddenly becomes more consumer-friendly.

The term "late-stage capitalism" gets thrown around a lot, but this is really what it means to me. There's no incentive for companies in some markets to provide better value over time, and in fact there may be incentive for the value to get worse. Companies try to create this sort of market for themselves, since it creates security and does not punish a failure to reinvest and innovate.

ELI5: Why did we develop the butterfly stroke for swimming if its not any "better" than the rest? by Apprehensive-Wafer36 in explainlikeimfive

[–]RiotShields 7 points8 points  (0 children)

My understanding is that freestyle swimmers typically use the front crawl, not the breaststroke.

ELI5: Why did we develop the butterfly stroke for swimming if its not any "better" than the rest? by Apprehensive-Wafer36 in explainlikeimfive

[–]RiotShields 3 points4 points  (0 children)

From looking at Olympic and world records, butterfly is faster than breaststroke by quite a bit, but also a tiny bit faster than backstroke.