> This was a favorite zinger that my evolutionary biology teach liked to spring on unsuspecting students that tried to argue that they could demonstrate that low iq among AAs was due to genetic differences. And what…
You can download your genotype SNP data as a backup. I don't know about the health reports (are they so voluminous that you cannot open up each in a tab and then save them all as a batch of HTML files?) but there's a…
> This is completely fine if you're tooling around in a research lab or industrial lab, but even a 1% loss is probably too much for a human brain to bear and remain the same as before. You probably lose at least that…
It also sounds like a motivating example for machine-checked proofs: if one could feed Mochizuki's proof into Coq or something and be assured that it was correct, even if only in a purely formal sense, I suspect there…
That doesn't matter if they're doing paired comparisons, as they are. 2 comparisons of a few hundred images yields far more reliable results than a few hundred comparisons of 2 images, because there are measurements…
That the Russians have been doing it for years and it's been so slow to catch on suggests the opposite, for the same reason that the increasing spread of autonomous cars is not a sign of the decay & fall of the West but…
> That's right, that terribly communist government suppressing its people and free speech, is actually responsible for lifting 500 million people out of poverty over the last 30 years. Indeed, China's success has been a…
https://www.academia.edu/15399080/Hearing_Voices_in_differen...
"I discovered that at least one person in Europe in the 1730s not only knew about Buddhism but had studied Buddhist philosophy for years. His name was Ippolito Desideri, and he had been a Jesuit missionary in Tibet. In…
> ALCOR does claim that the patient care trust will be enough to cover revival So you understand exactly how it's supposed to work and what I was talking about, and you were playing dumb by claiming to misinterpret my…
The /r/machinelearning discussion (https://www.reddit.com/r/MachineLearning/comments/3iayyz/neu...) makes an interesting point about the 18 tasks thing: > That was my first instinct too. Going back to the dynamic memory…
> This was a favorite zinger that my evolutionary biology teach liked to spring on unsuspecting students that tried to argue that they could demonstrate that low iq among AAs was due to genetic differences. And what…
You can download your genotype SNP data as a backup. I don't know about the health reports (are they so voluminous that you cannot open up each in a tab and then save them all as a batch of HTML files?) but there's a…
> This is completely fine if you're tooling around in a research lab or industrial lab, but even a 1% loss is probably too much for a human brain to bear and remain the same as before. You probably lose at least that…
It also sounds like a motivating example for machine-checked proofs: if one could feed Mochizuki's proof into Coq or something and be assured that it was correct, even if only in a purely formal sense, I suspect there…
That doesn't matter if they're doing paired comparisons, as they are. 2 comparisons of a few hundred images yields far more reliable results than a few hundred comparisons of 2 images, because there are measurements…
That the Russians have been doing it for years and it's been so slow to catch on suggests the opposite, for the same reason that the increasing spread of autonomous cars is not a sign of the decay & fall of the West but…
> That's right, that terribly communist government suppressing its people and free speech, is actually responsible for lifting 500 million people out of poverty over the last 30 years. Indeed, China's success has been a…
https://www.academia.edu/15399080/Hearing_Voices_in_differen...
"I discovered that at least one person in Europe in the 1730s not only knew about Buddhism but had studied Buddhist philosophy for years. His name was Ippolito Desideri, and he had been a Jesuit missionary in Tibet. In…
> ALCOR does claim that the patient care trust will be enough to cover revival So you understand exactly how it's supposed to work and what I was talking about, and you were playing dumb by claiming to misinterpret my…
The /r/machinelearning discussion (https://www.reddit.com/r/MachineLearning/comments/3iayyz/neu...) makes an interesting point about the 18 tasks thing: > That was my first instinct too. Going back to the dynamic memory…