ℝ𝕒𝕓𝕓𝕚𝕥

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ℝ𝕒𝕓𝕓𝕚𝕥

ℝ𝕒𝕓𝕓𝕚𝕥

@GregnLV

Las Vegas, NV. #Hockey #Soccer #Tennis #Wiffleball #Engineering #Snowboarding #Guitar #Poker #ProudRec #Bitcoin. I know what I don't know and it's a lot.

ÜT: 32.727584,-117.173892 Katılım Şubat 2009
147 Takip Edilen262 Takipçiler
Faraz Jaka
Faraz Jaka@FarazJaka·
Seeing a lot of players say the new WSOP dealer rating system is “dumb” because salty players will give bad ratings after running bad. As a business owner obsessed with metrics/data, I completely disagree, and it’s not even close. Noisy data is still extremely valuable at scale. The idea that some miserable players will irrationally rate dealers poorly isn’t some fatal flaw. That noise largely averages out over large enough sample sizes. Great dealers and terrible dealers will still separate from the pack over time. That’s what matters. Businesses almost never have perfect data. They care about relative performance and trend movement. Example: When we look at email click data it's full of fake clicks from virus scanners auto-clicking links. Does that make email metrics useless? Of course not. If your campaigns suddenly go from 150 clicks to 250 clicks consistently, you clearly improved something, even if the absolute numbers are inflated. Same concept here, except the ratings may be deflated. Even if emotionally driven ratings lowered the “true” dealer average from what should be 4.0 stars to 3.0 stars… who cares? WSOP likely isn’t looking for a mathematically pure score. They should be looking for: - Which dealers consistently stand out at the top - Which dealers consistently stand out at the bottom - Whether training/protocol changes improve dealer ratings. - Which managers/recruiters consistently provide higher than average dealers That’s all extremely valuable information. Online poker pros have heard bad players make irrational arguments for years about why PokerTracker stats “hurt their game.” Experienced players understand that more information > less information, as long as you understand how to interpret the noise.
WSOP - World Series of Poker@WSOP

Our Dealer Rating System is coming to Vegas! Using the new Dealer Rating System on WSOP Live… • Players can rate the dealer at their table • Ratings are shared internally with tournament staff • Dealers with the highest ratings will earn rewards throughout the series @jeffplatt and the rest of Team WSOP are excited to recognize and reward great dealers at the WSOP. Shuffle up and deal!

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SinBin.vegas
SinBin.vegas@SinBinVegas·
Lines at morning skate before Game 4 vs ANA with Mark Stone out. Barbashev-Eichel-Dorofeyev Howden-Karlsson-Marner Saad-Hertl-Kolesar C.Smith-Dowd-Sissons McNabb-Theodore Hanifin-Andersson Hutton-Coghlan
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DK
DK@donnaherzing·
@realfbllliason It was a tricky shot. He gave the illusion of going high. Basically a changeup.
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The cfb lliason
The cfb lliason@realfbllliason·
If you don’t think it’s a goalie problem, you are crazy! Lukas Dostal has to stop this puck, it’s Mcnabb no traffic in front! Vegas scored every goal tonight far side! His angles are off! He has gotten beaten in this series either a pass back door or a shot! Vegas knows how to beat him
Félix Sicard@Felix_Sicard

Goaltending and defensive woes will grab headlines tonight, but the Ducks have been quiet offensively for most of the evening. Some chances here and there, but far below what they've shown this post-season.

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ℝ𝕒𝕓𝕓𝕚𝕥
@Kloman22 It's ironic that people who are supposed to understand how statistical analysis works... actually don't.
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Kyle Loman
Kyle Loman@Kloman22·
Poker players are just unreal brutal. Forever have complained about WSOP dealer quality. Everyone seems to not understand how difficult it is to have a massive temporary staff that is highly skilled. WSOP comes up with an attempt to improve it finally, they immediatelly hate it.
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Her_Nonymous_Diary
Her_Nonymous_Diary@Her_Nonymous_D·
Last night I witnessed one of the most embarrassing bar situations I’ve ever seen. 😭 This man walked up behind a group of 3,girls, leaned over to the bartender, and confidently said, “Whatever they want, it’s on me.” Then he walked away. Now naturally the girls got excited because… free drinks. 😭 So after their first round, they decided to order 3 shots of Don Julio too. The bartender made everything, sat the drinks down, and suddenly everyone started looking around for the mystery generous man. Tell me why this man was…
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The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
NEARLY DOUBLE ECONOMISTS' EXPECTATIONS!
The White House tweet media
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ℝ𝕒𝕓𝕓𝕚𝕥
@GoldenKnights @forthepeople If you are legally required through some sponsorship agreement to post this then ok. Even then, its pretty embarrassing. I would rather do a free make good with Morgan & Morgan than publicly celebrate a meaningless goal in a game you were thoroughly outplayed in.
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Todd Witteles
Todd Witteles@ToddWitteles·
For some reason, @pokerorg deleted the very entertaining video of Mike Dentale @Itsasetup777 and Nick Palma vigorously arguing at a Borgata tournament. Why? This sort of thing should be widely shared, as it increases general interest in poker. Did Borgata threaten Poker Org to take it down? Very bizarre. If anyone has a copy, send it to me and I will host it on my server. This classic does not deserve to be scrubbed from the internet.
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The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
Happy Cinco de Mayo to all who celebrate!
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DucksDaily
DucksDaily@DucksDaily93·
Can I also say that Vegas - please, please for the love of God, ditch the baby poop gold and go back to these full time
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The cfb lliason
The cfb lliason@realfbllliason·
Thought I should help Vegas Golden Knights fans understand the icing rule, do you think this is icing?! Jackson Lacombe won the race for the Anaheim Ducks, it’s not even close! Jack Eichel stopped skating because he knew it was icing absolutely atrocious!
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DucksDaily
DucksDaily@DucksDaily93·
Also can Vegas and Anaheim fans agree that TNT is infinitely better than ESPN? What an awful broadcast
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ℝ𝕒𝕓𝕓𝕚𝕥
@VegasJediKnight Yeah he's just doing his job. He is literally a mouthpiece for the front office. I just think sometimes people forget he isn't an impartial journalist that covers the team. He gets paid by them directly.
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Spittin' Chiclets
Spittin' Chiclets@spittinchiclets·
“I don’t understand why it’s cut throat. Players all want to play here.” @garylawless may be the only person that doesn’t think the Vegas Golden Knights are cut throat.
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The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
In a galaxy that demands strength - America stands ready. This is the way. May the 4th be with you.
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Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu@RealKidPoker·
Interesting read:
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

If you use TikTok, you should read this once. In October 2024, a court clerk in Kentucky uploaded the lawsuit against TikTok with the confidential sections still visible. NPR downloaded it before anyone caught the mistake. By the time the court resealed it, the internet had a copy. What was inside was TikTok's own engineers, in their own words, describing what their app does to a human brain. Not a critic's brain. Yours. Here is what they wrote down. — TikTok ran the math on how long it takes to develop "compulsive use" of the app. The number is 260 videos. With 8-second videos played in rapid-fire succession, that works out to roughly 35 minutes. The company's internal documents call this the compulsive-use threshold. — TikTok's own research describes what compulsive use causes: "diminished analytical ability, impaired memory, contextual reasoning, conversational depth, empathy, and heightened anxiety." That is not a quote from a critic. That is TikTok's own language, in its own internal documents. — A team inside the company called "TikTank" wrote in an internal report that compulsive use on the platform was "rampant." — After 30 minutes of continuous use in one sitting, the company's own documents state that users are placed into "filter bubbles" — algorithmic loops the user did not choose and cannot easily escape. Then there is the screen-time tool — the one TikTok publicly markets as proof it cares. — TikTok ran an experiment on the 60-minute screen-time prompt. Daily teen usage dropped from 108.5 minutes to 107. A reduction of 1.5 minutes. — Internally, the screen-time tool was not measured by whether it reduced screen time. Its top success metric, in writing, was "improving public trust in the TikTok platform via media coverage." — A project manager wrote in internal chat: "Our goal is not to reduce the time spent." Another employee added that the goal was "to contribute to daily active users and retention." — A TikTok executive approved the screen-time feature only on the condition that its impact on the company's "core metrics" was minimal. The lawsuit alleges the company planned to "revisit the design" if the tool ever reduced usage by more than 10%. The "Are you still scrolling?" break videos? An executive admitted in an internal meeting they were "useful talking points" for lawmakers, but "not altogether effective." Then there is the algorithm itself. — An internal report flagged that the For You feed was showing what the company called "a high volume of not attractive subjects." TikTok then retooled the algorithm to suppress those users. Kentucky authorities wrote: "By changing the TikTok algorithm to show fewer 'not attractive subjects' in the For You feed, [TikTok] took active steps to promote a narrow beauty norm even though it could negatively impact their Young Users." That sentence is the entire pitch of the platform, said out loud. — Internally, TikTok also acknowledged that its publicly reported content moderation metrics were "mostly misleading," because they only measured the content the company successfully moderated — never the content it missed. Now read those bullet points again as one continuous case. The company knows the addiction threshold. The company measured it. The company ranked engagement over mental health in writing. The company built a screen-time tool whose internal success metric was PR. The company suppressed people it deemed unattractive to keep you scrolling. The company called its own moderation numbers misleading. None of this is a leaked rumor. None of this is a journalist's interpretation. This is a court filing. The documents are TikTok's. The words are TikTok's. The math is TikTok's. The 14 state attorneys general who signed onto this lawsuit aren't fringe activists. They're a bipartisan coalition. Sources at the bottom: NPR, CNN, AP, Mashable, OPB, The Independent. All citing the same accidentally-unsealed Kentucky filing from October 11, 2024. The next time the company tells you it cares about your wellbeing — the screen-time prompts, the break videos, the safety features, the careful PR statements — remember that its own engineers wrote down, in court-admissible language, that the safeguards were never meant to work. The app is not broken. It is performing exactly as designed. You were the spec.

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