lliiffee's comments

lliiffee | 5 years ago | on: Is Reddit doing mass bot suspensions?

On a related note, I had a very early account (probably one of the first 1000 on the site). Years later reddit said they lost some laptop with account info, and so they reset all the passwords. My account was from before there was email. My attempts to get the account back all were met with responses that said "use email reset" and seemed to imply I'd done something wrong. My thanks for being a loyal user for over a decade.

lliiffee | 5 years ago | on: Drivers who keep their windows down are exposed to 80 percent more air pollution

I was surprised to learn recently that there is a cheap and easy to take action that will reduce your exposure to air pollution while driving: Replace your passenger-compartment air filter with a HEPA filter! Most cars made in the last 15 years or so have an air filter right before the AC. You can, for slightly more money, replace this with a HEPA filter. I haven't tested, but this will probably be very effective, since the car is such a small space and there is so much pollution outside.

Replacing the filter is an incredibly easy job on most cars. You don't need any tools or even to open the hood. You just pull out your glove box, and then the filter slides in and out.

I honestly think that in terms of health, this might be the action that has the highest ROI. (Amount of health improvement per amount of time / money invested.)

lliiffee | 7 years ago | on: How Seattle blew its chance at a subway system (2016)

Honest question: what if those self-driving cars have multiple people in them? With 4 people you quadruple the throughput, and this seems technically achievable with technology. Minivans and the like go further. I certainly haven't run the numbers vs rail but in most regions it seems like 4x ing the highways would meet current needs comfortably.

lliiffee | 7 years ago | on: A Course in Machine Learning

I sympathize, but do keep in mind that it would be very difficult to teach all the math at the same time. Imagine trying to run a course in French on analytic philosophy. If your students didn't know much French coming in, you'd be in a tough spot.

lliiffee | 8 years ago | on: Show HN: Convert screenshots of equations to LaTeX

Any way you could make this available outside the Mac App store? Apple seems to have decided I did something horrible and unforgivable by moving to a different country after creating an account, thus making it impossible for me to use the store.

lliiffee | 8 years ago | on: What are you banned from? Why?

To be a little optimistic, it does seem to me that the ESTA system (where an electronic check is done for visitors looking to use the visa waiver program before they travel) has greatly reduced these types of situations. However, ESTA is only used for visitors arriving by air/sea and not for people driving or walking over the border.

In any case, I myself (an american citizen) have been treated with extreme disrespect and a total lack of professionalism when crossing the border at this same checkpoint by car from the Canadian side to the American side. The particularly ridiculous part of this was that after I waited an hour for them to tear everything apart in my car looking for contraband -- at which point it's been verified that I was doing nothing wrong -- they continued to be completely antagonistic.

Edit: I filed a complaint about this, which did lead to a supervisor calling me back and talking to me on the phone for probably 30 minutes. The supervisor was reasonably pleasant, but unapologetic. (Is it reasonable that someone be forced out of their car in the middle of winter and not allowed to get their coat?) He claimed that he put a "warning" on the officer's record, though this didn't seem credible. He again and again seemed to imply that I might have been smuggling, after which I had to remind him that my car was extensively searched and cleared.

lliiffee | 8 years ago | on: Ways to fix statistics

To build on fny's answer, there is one school of statistics (Bayesian statistics) where there basically is a "right" way to do analysis for any problem, provided you make the necessary assumptions (likelihood and prior) correctly. However, the most common statistical concepts (e.g. p-values or confidence intervals) are not in the Bayesian school

lliiffee | 8 years ago | on: Ways to fix statistics

I'm sure they would! But there's a pretty strong argument it's a step in the right direction. Actually, this link makes a more modest proposal that papers should report likelihoods rather than p-values. This avoids reported results results depending on priors (which perhaps we don't trust authors to choose well), though a reader can easily impose themselves if they want to.

https://arbital.com/p/likelihoods_not_pvalues/

You still have the option to muck with things by choosing your hypothesis class in a bad way-- nothing can really replace publishing data!

lliiffee | 8 years ago | on: 150 days of living and coding in a van

Could you give more details about how you combined these? I'm aware of both of these tools, but wasn't sure how they could be used together. At the moment I heavily use mosh which is pretty much perfect aside from the fact that it kills my local scrollback history.

lliiffee | 9 years ago | on: Mexican Newspaper Shuts Down, Saying It Is Too Dangerous to Continue

I think you're making the argument that with more guns, countries tend to have fewer gun deaths per gun. This makes sense, casually. However, I doubt that anyone cares about the number of gun murders per gun, but rather the total number of gun murders, which is (please correct me if wrong) still correlated with more guns.

Also, I see that you've focused the discussion on gun murders, which is fine, but we should note that decreased gun ownership does lead to far fewer gun deaths, mostly by reducing suicides.

lliiffee | 9 years ago | on: Eigg – A small Scottish isle that runs on 90-95% renewable energy

The project cost £1.66m. With a total of 83 residents, that's about $25,000 per person. It would be interesting to compare this to the total investment needed for a typical non-renewable power infrastructure. This doesn't seem outrageously expensive, though (as the article mentions) this might be out of reach for communities in developing countries.

lliiffee | 9 years ago | on: Tesla – Lithium-ion storage is ready to power the grid

Can anyone explain the logic behind having lots of small batteries, rather than the power company buying a Big Battery and offering this as a service?

Two reasons occur to me:

1. Situations off the grid or with unreliable power (eg blackouts) 2. Transmission costs are high, so it's better to have the storage close to the source.

Even in the second case, it seems like the power company could distribute these. I wonder if they are just more regulated/slow moving/immune to marketing.

lliiffee | 9 years ago | on: Priceonomics Idea Tester

They prevent that by hosting it somewhere that no one can find it's associated with you. Not saying that's ethical, but it does prevent immediate harm to your brand, unless people somehow remembered on clicking the link when they see the actual article. (Which would still be a tiny fraction.)
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