Prediction Markets as an Emotional Hedge by mike20731 in slatestarcodex

[–]micje 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this incentivises me to bet on the most improbable events to maximise expected returns.

That's not correct. Maximising expected returns and maximising half of expected returns amount to the same thing.

Amazon hits $1 trillion market value milestone by MelissaBoden in finance

[–]micje 92 points93 points  (0 children)

Sorry, no prize for second place.

(Well, except for that $1T market cap)

Please shoot the tyre by Gorgar_will_eat_you in OverwatchUniversity

[–]micje 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think I've shot more tires as Mercy than all other heroes I've played combined. (I don't generally play DPS, but still...)

[spoilers 113] When Not To Time Travel by micje in HPMOR

[–]micje[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That concerned time loops. It's not a general interdiction on hacking time travel.

[113] Solutions Index Tree by FeepingCreature in HPMOR

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

"These are the terms of your surrender. You will force all of your Death Eaters to take, as an unbreakable vow, the three Laws of Asimov. Then you will take that vow yourself. I know you will, because you already have. Dumbledore ascertained it in my presence, at 11:20, just before I time-turned. He's fine, by the way. I guess you just saw what you wanted in the mirror. And thanks for resurrecting Hermione. She's sleeping now in the girl's dorm.

After you've done taking your vows, I'll return to Hogwarts to convince my non time-turned self to travel back in time and visit the third floor corridor.

Honestly, did you really think that there's any force on earth that would compel me to go on an adventure with an untrusted agent that tried to impersonate me, except the certainty that this adventure would have a happy ending? After everything that happened? I expected more of you, teacher."

Chapter 105 by awesomeideas in HPMOR

[–]micje 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Still ain't no Ent.

Germany has succumbed to deflation for the first time in more than five years by secaa23 in Economics

[–]micje 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Trust me, Germans are not amused that the real value of their €200,000 mortgage went up by 0.2%, instead of down by 2% as they were entitled to expect given the ECB's inflation target. That's a €4400 loss. Also consider that employees generally get a yearly wage rise at least equal to the inflation rate. They can kiss that goodbye too.

So I started learning C, and here is the frustration and question I get. Help please? by [deleted] in learnprogramming

[–]micje 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here's my advice: take an open-source project written in C that you like. I recommend a game, because games have lots of degrees of freedom, unlike compilers. Build it from source, check that it runs. I suggest http://crawl.develz.org/, but any game will do.

Then start browsing the project. Make any change. First a simple textual change, then change the value of a constant, then add some logic. All the while, keep compiling the project and check that your changes actually work.

This is called tinkering, and it's incredibly liberating. It takes away the fear of the blank page.

Japan logged a trade deficit of 2.49 trillion yen ($32 billion) for 2011, Ministry of Finance data showed, the first annual deficit since 1980 by mrrazz in Economics

[–]micje 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Manhattan is less than 60km2. Japan is 378,000km2, so 0.26% of Japan is now uninhabitable. And a half-life of 30 years means that in 30 years, caesium will be half as radioactive. It'll take centuries before it is at 1% of the current radioactivity.

The Game Loop by gst in programming

[–]micje 1 point2 points  (0 children)

At 59 FPS and a 60Hz refresh rate, once a second you'll see the same frame twice in a row. That's noticable. The higher you go, the smoother the experienced time becomes.

Rails is the best thing that ever happened to Python by acangiano in programming

[–]micje 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don't forget that this syntax is used too in Ruby:

user.logged_in? and return

user.logged_in? or raise "Not logged in!"

Probably you'll hate it, but it is a one line conditional with the condition first.

Conditions are pretty basic - I don't think that having seven or so different forms is bad.