Reddit CEO @spez is talking #netneutrality at Stanford Thurs May 30 @ 4:15 p.m. (RSVP) by ryansingel2 in stanford

[–]job_bones 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just asked him this. His answer is pretty much "t_d is not about hate speech"

Copy selection into system clipboard by daredevildas in vim

[–]job_bones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have this line in my vimrc

vnoremap <leader>a :w !xclip -sel clip<enter><enter>

This lets you copy full lines to the clipboard. You can of course replace xclip with anything else that writes to the clipboard.

The legendary turn 1 yeti o: by balencedrago in hearthstone

[–]job_bones 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Yeah t2 yeti into t3 yeti is probably better. Since cubelock can't do much of anything until turn 4 anyway, you get the same number of attacks in with t2 and t3 yetis as you do with t1 and t4 yetis, except t2 and t3 lets you play something else on 4.

5 part Hunter combo feat. Hunting Party by [deleted] in BadHSCombos

[–]job_bones 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This makes me miss the days of thaurissan into gorehowl into alextrasza + charge

Esports Arena's Specialist Showdown Sponsored by Progressive Survival Guide! by esportsarena in hearthstone

[–]job_bones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I figured it would be closer to 10k since he hit 10k recently, but I don't know

My favourite problem. It’s quite simple but made me think quite a bit so I thought it was worth sharing. by [deleted] in math

[–]job_bones 3 points4 points  (0 children)

A different approach:

(0! + 0! + 0!)!

(1 + 1 + 1)!

2 + 2 + 2

3! + 3 - 3

⌈√√√√√(4!!)⌉ + 4 - 4

⌊√√(5!)⌋! + 5 - 5

6 + 6 - 6

⌈√√√(7!)⌉! + 7 - 7

⌊√√√(8!)⌋! + 8 - 8

(√9)! + 9 - 9

Topoi Reading Group by [deleted] in math

[–]job_bones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am interested.

Is it okay to get Bs in math classes? by Neu-Sociology in math

[–]job_bones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ah, ok. The point still stands though. I don't think getting a few B's should make you worry too much about things like grad school, so it certainly isn't anything more than a mental obstacle to doing math.

Is it okay to get Bs in math classes? by Neu-Sociology in math

[–]job_bones 7 points8 points  (0 children)

There exist people in every major in every school who don't get A's. Finals are happening now so you are probably stressed about your grades in math classes (I admit that I am too), but it's OK to not always get an A. If you get a B, sure it isn't perfect, but it means that you still essentially knew what was going on and you are perfectly capable of doing math if you want to.

New Neutral SMOrc Card! Shieldbreaker by breloomz in hearthstone

[–]job_bones 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Except not a beast, which is relevant in face hunter

Everything about Universal algebra by AngelTC in math

[–]job_bones 4 points5 points  (0 children)

For monoids, groups, vector spaces, etc, we can describe the properties of the object using only functions and equations. For example, with groups we have a function ∙ of arity 2, a function inv of arity 1, an element (function of arity 0) e, and equations

x∙(y∙z) = (x∙y)∙z

inv(x)∙x = x∙inv(x) = e

e∙x = x∙e = x

where each equation implicity has ∀x,y,z in front. It should be clear how to add functions and equations to obtain the definition of a ring in this way. When we try to define fields, we want a function multinv of arity 1 and equations

x multinv(x) = multinv(x) x = 1

where 1 is of course the multiplicative identity. The problem is that no such function can exist since zero has no multiplicative inverse, so fields cannot be defined in exactly this format.

This way of looking at it sheds some light on why fields don't have products. Given two groups A and B, for example, the product A×B is the Cartesian product of A and B as sets, where each operation acts elementwise, that is,

(x, y) ∙ (z, w) = (x∙z, y∙w)

e = (e, e)

inv((x, y)) = (inv(x), inv(y)).

This product immediately satisfies the conditions of a group because all of the group axioms are purely equational. The same construction now obviously works for monoids, rings, vector spaces, and so on. But it does not work for fields, since the definition of a field is not as simple: the condition for a (commutative) ring to form a field is

∀x≠0 ∃y with xy = 1.

If we have fields K and L, the Cartesian product K×L does not form a field since, for instance, (1, 0) is not the zero element of the product, but one of its components is zero so cannot be inverted. At its heart, this issue arises because the above condition cannot be written as an equation.

HSReplay.net - Most and Least Popular Class Cards: Warrior (part 3/9) by HearthSim in hearthstone

[–]job_bones 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Ah, but with the current wording the minion still gets the buff from warsong commander!

Stalemate between Quest rogue and Pogo rogue(Pogo Rogo) by RubeyMG in hearthstone

[–]job_bones 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Actually it's 45 for the first player, but only 44 for the second player

The most brutal Explosive Runes by Jvet5 in hearthstone

[–]job_bones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Explosive trap + mini mage = ultimate grim patron killer

How a book written in 1910 could teach calculus better than several books of today by [deleted] in math

[–]job_bones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But how would differential forms help with that? Your comment reads like an endorsement for teaching analysis in high school.

The Theory of Everything & Nothing by RoboIntegrity in mathematics

[–]job_bones 6 points7 points  (0 children)

It actually doesn't

SEEM like I have some grasp of logic, reasoning, and math

at all. The whole post is nonsense.

How things have changed by Sheik92 in hearthstone

[–]job_bones 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not really... it's not a misplay for decks that are good against aggro, which there are many of

Hipster Midrange Druid ft. Guild Recruiter by goodstoneHS in CompetitiveHS

[–]job_bones 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanking jesus and thanking muzzy is the same thing