logjammin's comments

logjammin | 5 years ago | on: Spotify signs ‘The Joe Rogan Experience’ to an exclusive multi-year deal

I came here to write exactly this about Louis. Hell, he was doing that long before he became a pariah.

I think that cries of "censorship!" from bien-pensant tech folks are largely overblown, and not only for the reasons cited in this thread. If some heterodox ideas of today truly will be part of future orthodoxies, they'll find a way - YouTube or not. A powerful concept that dies on the vine because it cannot get onto Facebook isn't a powerful concept.

logjammin | 5 years ago | on: Factors associated with Covid-19 deaths in records of 17M adult NHS patients

I'd quibble slightly with the interpretation of the Hazard Ratio (or rate) here and say that it's more like "the instantaneous relative risk (or probability, if you like) of the event of interest [in this case mortality but not necessarily] between those with confirmed coronavirus and those without it, given that both groups have survived until time t and holding [set of covariates of interest, e.g. race, age, etc] constant."

Don't mean to sound like a pedant here even though it totally reads that way. I figured with enough epidemiology in the news these days, people may see a lot of "Hazard ratios" or "Cox regression" or "survival analysis" and be at risk of some confusion. I work with these concepts and I get tripped up myself sometimes.

logjammin | 5 years ago | on: New Lenovo ThinkPad Range with Ryzen 4000 and 4000 Pro Mobile

Seconded (well, eighth'd, if the rest of the comments are any indication). I got a 6th gen X1C at the end of '18 and it's brilliant. It'd be neat to have a Ryzen option on them in the future, as I have a desktop I build with an AMD CPU and love it.

My only complaint about my X1? Windows.

logjammin | 5 years ago | on: Finnish basic income pilot improved wellbeing, study finds

You make good points, but you may be missing why OP's comment is getting the upvotes it's getting, or at least why I'd wager it is: he describes the kind of contentment that most of us can't even imagine possessing without winning the lottery, and he described having that contentment with surprisingly (to him/her) modest means. I can't speak for anyone else, but this is why I upvoted it. Hell, I can think of at least two times in my life where I've been scolded about being unproductive or ambition-less for even mentioning the possibility of living such a life (without being a millionaire).

Solely with respect to this person's comment, what we call such an arrangement matters a lot less than the high quality of the life he/she describes.

logjammin | 6 years ago | on: If a MacBook Pro runs hot or shows high kernel CPU, try charging it on the right

This is really helpful, thank you. What you say puts some form and empirical evidence to my concerns about Hackintosh. I guess my gut had it right this time, which is unusual. So you can brick your fancy new homemade, warranty-less PC!

Anyway maybe one day I'll do it for fun on a crappy laptop I get off Craigslist. Sounds like this pays off most when it's a low-risk effort.

logjammin | 6 years ago | on: If a MacBook Pro runs hot or shows high kernel CPU, try charging it on the right

Great question. The answer may boil down to the way my memory works. I work in research, so I'm constantly reading and citing papers and studies for lit reviews, general understanding, making sure no one else has done the project I just thought up in the shower (usually they have), and mainly just staying at the crest of the wave in my field and subfields.

With the exception of the big famous names (famous for the 13 of us in our niche, anyway), I rarely remember those studies' authors, nor the titles of the papers most of the time - i.e. the data encoded in the filename. But I do remember certain phrases, numbers, and the like that they use in the body of the paper - in other words, the material that actually interests me. File content search for PDFs and other text allows me to enter one of these snippets and find the paper in question without having to spend minutes upon minutes scratching my head about "who was that lady at NYU ... or was it a guy at Berkeley"?

logjammin | 6 years ago | on: If a MacBook Pro runs hot or shows high kernel CPU, try charging it on the right

I didn't know about that upcoming feature. I'm really excited to hear that, so thanks. The PDF thing is a wild oversight, too, but I found SumatraPDF and am really impressed by its light weight and speed and bare-bones ethos. There's barely a UI but man can it handle 53 open PDFs at once.

I have both WSL and dual boot, but I dual boot way more. This is likely because I am a command line idiot, and never got fully fluent with navigating my computing life using one. It's high on my list of skills to master in life, because I know what a force multiplier it can be, but I haven't gotten around to it. I mostly use Linux to write, weirdly enough: from org mode to LaTeX to statistics coding, it's a smooth experience - again because it's pretty "just the basics" and does them well. I have no actual need for Linux - I'd be fine with just windows. I guess it's more aspirational on my part.

Apple's moves: yeah man, they're taking that walled garden shit to serious extremes. I know there's a logic to it that works for them, so I don't begrudge them their choices necessarily. But I did really like the company for a long time, so it's a bummer to see them the way they are now.

logjammin | 6 years ago | on: If a MacBook Pro runs hot or shows high kernel CPU, try charging it on the right

Yeah that's a great point. I thought about it initially, but I got a little nervous (perhaps unjustifiably) about the Hackintosh universe being a little slapdash and then about Apple maybe issuing some under the radar OS update that bricks my machine. I'm catastrophizing, maybe, but I never pulled the trigger. That said, I never actually put in the 3-4hrs of reading I'd need to do, so I definitely wouldn't rule it out.

Do you have experience with doing the Hackintosh thing at all?

logjammin | 6 years ago | on: If a MacBook Pro runs hot or shows high kernel CPU, try charging it on the right

"I swear, I wish I didn't love macOS so much (or wasn't so heavily invested in it), or I'd happily ditch it for a really powerful thermally cooled desktop and use that as my machine."

I was you at this time about two years ago. Exact same thing. Fed up with Apple hardware bullshit, and with their pricing. With Apple in general. I had a sick iMac (as sick as an iMac can be, I mean). Loved and was invested in OSX. But something tipped the scales. Can't remember what specifically, but I said "fuck it" and put the machine on Craigslist. Got a buyer immediately, and lost very little money on a three year old machine. Took the cash, plus a little more, and built a PC. A liquid cooled PC. An egregious, so-ugly-it's-kinda-neat monster with tubes and a radiator and fans and the whole deal. I run Windows 10 Pro and Ubuntu. Neither is perfect for me. Windows especially can be maddening. My personal pet peeve is the lack of powerful device search -- in OSX, I could use Spotlight or better yet Alfred to look inside PDFs, for example. SOL on that in W10.

But it was worth it. My AMD-powered PC smokes anything in my Zip code, I'm pretty sure, and it's more than enough for my work needs (and my work does actually put the thing through its paces.)

I miss OSX, but not enough to go back.

logjammin | 6 years ago | on: Covid may be far more widespread than we thought

This is a problem of insufficient data. We don't have a denominator, so there's no way to tell if it's more widespread than we thought. In fact there's no good way to tell how widespread it is at all. We have numerators: number of people sick enough to show to up to an ER, or number dead, or whatever, take your pick. But in every fraction we might want, we lack a denominator: total number of people infected.

There's a stuningly simple way to get one: sample randomly from a population of interest in large enough numbers (say e.g. Cook County, home of Chicago, or hell, the entire US) and test everyone for the virus. Voila! You have a representative chunk of your population, an estimate of virus prevalence, and a quantifiable degree of precision about that estimate (SE's for a confidence interval, say). With enough people in your sample, you can have extremely accurate estimates of the spread of Covid in your population of interest. You repeat this process over and over, through time, to track the numbers.

I'm not trivializing this kind of effort: it takes rigorous sampling designs and dozens or hundreds of field workers, among other things. It's intense but very straightforward. Political pollsters (and thousands of researchers in different fields) do it every day.

No one in the US has done this, and no one with any visibility from Fauci on down has even suggested it (that I know of; please correct me). I work in public health, and this is first year, first semester of grad school stuff.

This matters because the public health responses to coronavirus when there's 1% or 10% or 25% or 75% of a population infected all look very different. In short, we may be over- or underreacting to the situation with the measures we currently have in place.

I've been going half crazy wondering what's happening about this for a while now. After the initial fuckup, we now have tests. We have money. We can do this. Why don't we?

(Iceland has done this!)

logjammin | 6 years ago | on: Does your video call have End-to-End Encryption? Probably not

I've been using Wire [1] for years on desktop in large part because of their E2E claims; I wanted something simple and secure that worked relatively fluidly for video calls. I've had mostly pleasant experiences with it, and with many calls I'm surprised by the video quality. I've never tried their mobile app, but they've got one and it looks nice, aesthetically. Main drawback has really been that few people I know use it and I've had to cajole people into doing so a little bit, which stinks.

But I'm not a cryptographer and am unable to verify the company's security claims. For all I know it's go zero encryption whatsoever. Are there people on HN who feel qualified to comment? Has anyone used Wire before?

[1] https://wire.com/en/

logjammin | 6 years ago | on: Apple acquires Dark Sky

Hey, truly thanks for this. It's not Dark Sky, but it's not bad, and I never would've heard about it were it not for folks on HN. I'm getting good data for where I live, the UI is nice and clean. It's a start!
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