Very interesting "near-miss" of two integer sequences. I have to think about why the early coincidence happens.
@pixx@merveilles.town Any sufficiently predictable magic is indistinguishable from science.
fascinating reddit phenomenon
- r/anarchychess leaks onto a bunch of neighboring subreddits by replying to things with a string of replies: "Google [x]" "holy hell" etc.
- one of which is r/mathmemes, specifically with minimal square packing memes: "Google square packing" etc. sub is flooded with square packing memes.
- r/mathmemes bans square packing memes. users flock to r/anarchychess
- result: hybrid chess/math memes that sort of defy description
Forecasting is Worse is Better
The Brier score was invented in 1950, Bayes' theorem was first described in 1763, and probability theory was properly invented at the beginning of the 18th century.
However, attempting to use forecasting to seriously determine the probability of future events, training & selecting people for their forecasting ability and creating procedures that incorporate both intuition-based and model-based predictions have only been around since the mid 1980s
I'm now also back on twitter, handle niplav_site (celebrating the fact I managed to use the domain I now use: http://niplav.site
I operate by Crocker's rules[1].