> You have people playing these games with voice commands[1] and DDR mats[2] and whatever. If that isn't evidence this isn't a test of dexterity, I don't know what will. I thought it's precisely the opposite: people…
Wine used to have some proprietary forks such as Cedega before they switched from MIT to LGPL.
"The global average IQ score is rising by about 3 IQ points every decade." Is this statement correct? I was under impression that while the per-country averages are mostly rising, the global average is going down.…
"My major gripe with haskell was that I could never tell the space/time complexity of the my code without serious analysis (that among other things involves second-guessing the compiler's ability to optimize). This…
1. I agree with what you say. There exists a low-order strategy that has the same payoff against the low-order strategy your opponent uses, and you can use that if you know your opponent's strategy. However, in many…
> It's true, however, that this leads to a very interesting consequence which is not discussed in this context, something quite convoluted: "I will commit to a first-order Markov strategy in order to prevent my…
> You have people playing these games with voice commands[1] and DDR mats[2] and whatever. If that isn't evidence this isn't a test of dexterity, I don't know what will. I thought it's precisely the opposite: people…
Wine used to have some proprietary forks such as Cedega before they switched from MIT to LGPL.
"The global average IQ score is rising by about 3 IQ points every decade." Is this statement correct? I was under impression that while the per-country averages are mostly rising, the global average is going down.…
"My major gripe with haskell was that I could never tell the space/time complexity of the my code without serious analysis (that among other things involves second-guessing the compiler's ability to optimize). This…
1. I agree with what you say. There exists a low-order strategy that has the same payoff against the low-order strategy your opponent uses, and you can use that if you know your opponent's strategy. However, in many…
> It's true, however, that this leads to a very interesting consequence which is not discussed in this context, something quite convoluted: "I will commit to a first-order Markov strategy in order to prevent my…