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Stephanus said:The computer can make mistakes very big and very fast.
The computer is your friend.jim hardy said:With no remorse at all.
I was reflecting on comments like"mfb said:How many guilty persons get free? And how would those two rates change with suggested action X? I don't know, but that would have to be investigated.
There is only way to reduce this rate to 0 % - don't send anyone to prison. That is not a working model.
Such an injustice.And I knew this was a very burdensome requirement that had never been met in the jurisprudence of which I was aware. I also participated in placing before the jury dubious testimony from a forensic pathologist that the shooter had to be left handed, even though there was no eye witness to the murder. And yes, Glenn Ford was left handed.
All too late, I learned that the testimony was pure junk science at its evil worst.
In 1984, I was 33 years old. I was arrogant, judgmental, narcissistic, and very full of myself. I was not as interested in justice as I was in winning. To borrow a phrase from Al Pacino in the movie 'And Justice for All,' 'Winning became everything.'
It's a bit more complicated. For a fixed amount of effort put into the investigation, it is possible (in theory) to derive an ROC curve for court decisions. Different threshold for "this is enough evidence" give different rates of "guilty => correctly identified as guilty" and "innocent => falsely identified as guilty".jim hardy said:Does the old adage "Better a hundred guilty men go free than one innocent be convicted" suggest 1% is acceptable ?
Go back to post #464 and read forward a few pages.WWGD said:Sorry for the necropost, but I just read this and the answer came to me while cooking lunch.
Not that hard to show this is not possible: first, check this does not hold for 24!. Then notice that if n>24, then n>10. This is obvious, but notice that multiplying by anything larger than or equal to 10, the factorial will gain at least one digit in length. So , Let N(k!) be the number of digits in k! . We are trying to see when/if we can have N(k!)=k.
Then, given 23! has 23 digits , i.e., N(23!)=23, and N(24!)>24 , we see that N(k!) will increase at least by 1 from k to (k+1), while the digits increase just by 1 , i.e., when we go from N(24!) to N(25!) , k goes from 24 to 25, i.e., increases precisely by 1, while k, the number of digits, increases at least by 1, so there is no way N(k!) can catch up with k , since N(24!)> 24, and the expression in the left will increase at least as fast as the expression in the right. I leave it to you to see what happens when we use a number base different from decimal.
So you have two expressions A,B ; A>B for n>24, and then A goes on to increase faster than B after 24, so B cannot catch up with A.
But it will likely be as un-tasty as it sounds, unless you are a gourmet chef and/or can cook Indian-style dishes. I tried vegetarianism, but it was too hard to feel full after eating and I ended up grazing all day long as a result. Besides, if you eat out, options seem limited to eating salads, maybe falafel.Lisa! said:Recently I realized that switiching to a vegan diet might not be as hard as it sounds!
_ look like_ is the operating expression. Show me _taste like_ and that can be found when you eat out. I tried all sorts of vegetarian dishes and very few measured up. Specially those vege-sausages. Yikes.Silicon Waffle said:People can make things that look exactly like hot dogs or sea foods from tofu.
Yet "Scientists at Beyond Meat concocted a plant-protein-based performance burger that delivers the juicy flavor and texture of the real thing with none of the dietary and environmental downsides." Apparently the have the right ingredients and right process to produce a plant based set of proteins that tastes like beef.WWGD said:But it will likely be as un-tasty as it sounds, unless you are a gourmet chef and/or can cook Indian-style dishes. I tried vegetarianism, but it was too hard to feel full after eating and I ended up grazing all day long as a result. Besides, if you eat out, options seem limited to eating salads, maybe falafel.
Doesn't work here, but I guess this is not the fault of the website. After all, the nearest store is at least one intercontinental flight away...WWGD said:The creepy thing is that , when I clicked on "Store Locator" it recommended a store nearby , giving the precise distance, so the page does track down your location. Still, thanks, I will check it out.
Maybe if you were vegetarian you wouldn't be so lazy and you could run here and back to get your beastburgers :). ( This coming from a devoted carnivore ).mfb said:Doesn't work here, but I guess this is not the fault of the website. After all, the nearest store is at least one intercontinental flight away...
Astronuc said:an example of honor:
'Restored Honor': A World War II Pilot's Long Road Home
http://news.yahoo.com/restored-honor-world-war-ii-pilots-long-road-161503139--abc-news-topstories.html
The story would be appropriate for Memorial Day.
I know many people across the south, and they are good folks. I can't fathom how this person can separate slavery and the inhuman treatment of African-Americans (e.g., Jim Crow laws, etc) from the so-called 'heritage'."I'll tell you what, my two grown sons are proud members of the Sons of (the) Confederacy. They display the Confederate flag with pride, the same flag that flies at our state capitol ... That flag doesn't mean slavery, it means heritage.""I wish the history books would get it right," she added. "The [U.S. Civil] War was over state's rights, not slavery."
You mean something like swim across the atlantic? Unfortunately those suggestions disappeared in favor of flights.WWGD said:Maybe if you were vegetarian you wouldn't be so lazy and you could run here and back to get your beastburgers :). ( This coming from a devoted carnivore ).
Astronuc said:An example of cognitive dissonance - I know many people across the south, and they are good folks. I can't fathom how this person can separate slavery and the inhuman treatment of African-Americans (e.g., Jim Crow laws, etc) from the so-called 'heritage'.
The quote from Disbelief, defiance in South Carolina town once home to shooting suspect
http://news.yahoo.com/disbelief-defiance-south-carolina-town-once-home-shooting-004557864.html
I have often visited Columbia, SC as part of my work, and I saw the Confederate flag flying on the state house grounds. I could not understand why some folks couldn't see the meaning behind that flag, and I still can't.
Om said:When I see the flag, I see it as a symbol, that the owner is an ***hole. When I hear that a state is flying a version of the flag, I assume that most of the people there are ***holes, and I should stay away. hmmm... I will not sign the petition.