Matthew Saltzman

3.5K posts

Matthew Saltzman

Matthew Saltzman

@SaltzmanMJ

Professor of Math Sciences at Clemson Univ.. President of COIN-OR Foundation, Inc. Operations research, computation, software design, Linux, public affairs.

Clemson SC USA انضم Mayıs 2011
202 يتبع975 المتابعون
Varun Navani
Varun Navani@VarunNavani·
In 1997, a tiny nation made a decision that shocked the world. Now, they produce 2X more tech graduates than other developed nations. While others debate AI in schools, one country is building the future. Here's their revolutionary approach:
Varun Navani tweet media
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Jeffrey Scholz
Jeffrey Scholz@Jeyffre·
I read Google's paper about their quantum computer so you don't have to. They claim to have ran a quantum computation in 5 minutes that would take a normal computer 10^25 years. But what was that computation? Does it live up to the hype? I will break it down.🧵
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Dilan Esper
Dilan Esper@dilanesper·
We inherited our citizenship system from the British common law. Like most British colonies, we got our legal system from them. Our Constitution, with references to "common law" (7th Amendment) and "law and equity" (Article III) confirms the British basis of our legal system. 2/
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Dilan Esper
Dilan Esper@dilanesper·
Folks, birthright citizenship isn't just some interpretation of a few weirdly phrased passages in the 14th Amendment. We had birthright citizenship BEFORE the 14th Amendment. It's actually one of the oldest and most fundamental principles of American law. 1/
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Peyman Milanfar
Peyman Milanfar@docmilanfar·
The perpetually undervalued least-squares: minₓ‖y−Ax‖² can teach a lot about some complex ideas in modern machine learning including overfitting & double-descent. Let's assume A is n-by-p. So we have n data points and p parameters 1/10
Peyman Milanfar tweet media
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Lynn S. Teague lynnteague@bsky.social
Looking at the pathetic voter turnout for the primaries and runoffs — A lot of South Carolina non-voters are going to get what they asked for, a government they doesn’t care about them any more than they care about government.
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Michael Harriot
Michael Harriot@michaelharriot·
Theyhe SC Dept. of Education canceled AP African American Studies, @thegrio spoke with teachers, school administrators & superintendents to find out why SC essentially canceled the ONLY accredited HS course in Black History. THey all had the same answer. A thread.
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Matthew Saltzman أُعيد تغريده
ACLU of South Carolina
ACLU of South Carolina@ACLU_SC·
There's a reason why South Carolina's primary elections give an advantage to candidates who are wildly out of touch on issues including reproductive freedom: Extreme partisan gerrymandering.
ACLU of South Carolina tweet media
Nick Reynolds@IAmNickReynolds

Polls show near-total abortion bans and the current six-week ban are unpopular among South Carolinians. Challengers "aligned their platforms in opposition of what the majority of voters actually want." On Tuesday, they won anyway. w/ @AlMThompson: postandcourier.com/politics/south…

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Matthew Saltzman
Matthew Saltzman@SaltzmanMJ·
@LynnSTeague That insulation works both ways. They can't hear us and we can't fire them.
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Lynn S. Teague lynnteague@bsky.social
"A combination of extreme gerrymandering and a lack of knowledge about state legislatures will likely continue to insulate state legislators from demographic changes." Yes, we noticed that. Our legislature is out of sync with the people of South Carolina. tandfonline.com/eprint/PVHA6RD…
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Matthew Saltzman
Matthew Saltzman@SaltzmanMJ·
Following your state's Primary Election, fill out this voter feedback survey. Your participation will be immensely helpful, as @UCSUSA calls for equitable ballot design, fair redistricting maps, and the public release of election data. act.ucsusa.org/4a3P2RH
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Ryan Radia
Ryan Radia@RyanRadia·
You often hear about the fatality rate per 100 million or 1 billion passenger miles in transportation statistics, but over the last 15 years, U.S. airlines have averaged less than 1 fatality per passenger *light-year* traveled
Ryan Radia@RyanRadia

3 weeks ago marked 15 years since Feb 12, 2009—the last multiple-fatality accident involving a U.S. passenger airliner (Part 121). 11.6 billion passengers have since boarded a scheduled U.S. airline flight, with just 2 passenger fatalities (Part 121: Southwest 1380; PenAir 3296)

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