We already have a much more liquid terrorism futures market, i.e. the regular stock market. Worrying about incentives for a large attack from a prediction market is missing the ocean for a hypothetical raindrop.…
It's a nice xor swap, but I think you reversed your list twice. And xor swapping with x=y=2 is likely not ideal. Seems like exactly what I'd do in an interview too :p
It's just a small Cython-compiled utility throwing the warning, it works fine. Everything else is pure Python and so doesn't care about 3.5 vs 3.6. We will fix the warning, though (disclaimer: I work on TF and added…
A lot of the best practices for initializing/saving/restoring/etc. are handled automatically if you wrap your model in an Estimator[1] using a model_fn. It also enforces a "clean" model specification (in a new Graph)…
Like https://www.google.com/settings/ads ?
You could, but you would be wrong, as the remainder of the paragraph you started quoting argues quite convincingly. Fiddle with the free parameters of the contest and it "demonstrates" whatever you want it to.
The waiting time distribution is actually the geometric distribution (with expectation 1/p = 1/0.021 = 47.6, so about what they got).
One solution would be for Netflix to modify their clients to send useless and quickly discarded UDP packets back to balance out the traffic. Verizon then has tons of data to push back to Level3 and everyone's happy.
This is essentially the goal of probabilistic programming[1]: let the programmer specify and tweak the model, and have the analog of a compiler handle inference. Finding a good model is then analogous to debugging. You…
>Yep, because now you've just got your air rushing into the vacuum through the cracks, instead of water. Fair enough. I imagine there's a trade-off between the quality of the tunnel materials and the number of pumps…
Is there some reason that sandwiching air between the evacuated tube and the water wouldn't work? Granted it would add to the cost. The ocean depth point is interesting. The article says "engineers would tether the…
We already have a much more liquid terrorism futures market, i.e. the regular stock market. Worrying about incentives for a large attack from a prediction market is missing the ocean for a hypothetical raindrop.…
It's a nice xor swap, but I think you reversed your list twice. And xor swapping with x=y=2 is likely not ideal. Seems like exactly what I'd do in an interview too :p
It's just a small Cython-compiled utility throwing the warning, it works fine. Everything else is pure Python and so doesn't care about 3.5 vs 3.6. We will fix the warning, though (disclaimer: I work on TF and added…
A lot of the best practices for initializing/saving/restoring/etc. are handled automatically if you wrap your model in an Estimator[1] using a model_fn. It also enforces a "clean" model specification (in a new Graph)…
Like https://www.google.com/settings/ads ?
You could, but you would be wrong, as the remainder of the paragraph you started quoting argues quite convincingly. Fiddle with the free parameters of the contest and it "demonstrates" whatever you want it to.
The waiting time distribution is actually the geometric distribution (with expectation 1/p = 1/0.021 = 47.6, so about what they got).
One solution would be for Netflix to modify their clients to send useless and quickly discarded UDP packets back to balance out the traffic. Verizon then has tons of data to push back to Level3 and everyone's happy.
This is essentially the goal of probabilistic programming[1]: let the programmer specify and tweak the model, and have the analog of a compiler handle inference. Finding a good model is then analogous to debugging. You…
>Yep, because now you've just got your air rushing into the vacuum through the cracks, instead of water. Fair enough. I imagine there's a trade-off between the quality of the tunnel materials and the number of pumps…
Is there some reason that sandwiching air between the evacuated tube and the water wouldn't work? Granted it would add to the cost. The ocean depth point is interesting. The article says "engineers would tether the…