The language of science has shifted before; I don't think it's reasonable to assume it won't again. Then again, English might stay around as a, well, legacy language. I could imagine someone a few hundred years from now…
I mean, bombing Syria does seem farther away, in the geographical (and therefore emotional) sense. Plus, the United States is sickeningly nationalistic, and still carries a hint of pride about its immigrant origins.…
That's about as good as actually having studies, right?
Are there two layers of caching in that URL?
...As opposed to, what, a native application? A TUI? I mean, you can do a lot of amazing stuff in a TUI, but at this point I'm fairly sure that I only like them out of Stockholm syndrome.
It's generally custom, although we've had teams use ML strategies to tune their bots in the past. (I'm one of the people who runs this competition). We impose tight runtime limits on the code your AI can run - generally…
Apparently there's an exploit, given all of the answers with INT_MIN guesses on the leaderboard.
The language of science has shifted before; I don't think it's reasonable to assume it won't again. Then again, English might stay around as a, well, legacy language. I could imagine someone a few hundred years from now…
I mean, bombing Syria does seem farther away, in the geographical (and therefore emotional) sense. Plus, the United States is sickeningly nationalistic, and still carries a hint of pride about its immigrant origins.…
That's about as good as actually having studies, right?
Are there two layers of caching in that URL?
...As opposed to, what, a native application? A TUI? I mean, you can do a lot of amazing stuff in a TUI, but at this point I'm fairly sure that I only like them out of Stockholm syndrome.
It's generally custom, although we've had teams use ML strategies to tune their bots in the past. (I'm one of the people who runs this competition). We impose tight runtime limits on the code your AI can run - generally…
Apparently there's an exploit, given all of the answers with INT_MIN guesses on the leaderboard.