Jeremy Bante

9.7K posts

Jeremy Bante

Jeremy Bante

@jbante

Katılım Nisan 2009
393 Takip Edilen653 Takipçiler
Jeremy Bante retweetledi
Dr Kareem Carr
Dr Kareem Carr@kareem_carr·
Four life lessons I learned while studying statistics: 1. False positives vs false negatives: Fewer false positives often come at the cost of more false negatives and vice versa. LIFE LESSON: The less stringent your criteria, the more crap you need to deal with, but the more stringent your criteria, the more genuinely good stuff you miss out on. Missed opportunities is the price of never wasting your time. Wasting your time is the price of never missing an opportunity. 2. Overfitting vs Underfitting: Less flexible models can't fit the data. More flexible models are prone to picking up patterns that don't generalize. LIFE LESSON: Over-thinking makes you more vulnerable to seeing patterns that aren't there. It turns you into a misinformation machine. 3. Bias vs Variance: More complex models give less consistent answers. Less complex models give more biased answers. LIFE LESSON: There is a natural trade-off between nuanced thought and consensus. People get mad when experts disagree especially when non-experts don't but that's actually what you would expect. 4. Curse of Dimensionality: Given a fixed amount of scenarios to learn from, there's a point beyond which considering additional factors stops helping. LIFE LESSON: If you haven't experienced much, keep things simple. Nuance without experience is actively harmful. SUMMARY: The common theme I see is these are cautionary tales for over-thinkers like me. There are hard mathematical limitations on what we can possibly know as rational beings. There is wisdom in knowing when to think but there's also wisdom in knowing when to stop.
Dr Kareem Carr tweet mediaDr Kareem Carr tweet mediaDr Kareem Carr tweet mediaDr Kareem Carr tweet media
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Jeremy Bante
Jeremy Bante@jbante·
@ubiqunity @mz123 @SoliantMike @FileMaker There's nothing stopping the logic between a trackpad sensor and pointer movement from implementing the same type of control. Keyboards are better than any pointing device when discrete incremental steps are needed anyway.
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Jeremy Bante
Jeremy Bante@jbante·
@ubiqunity @mz123 @SoliantMike @FileMaker My point is not theoretical. Whether through manipulating an object or direct contact, styluses, mice, trackballs, and trackpads share the same accuracy & precision limitations from contact with the same fingers.
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Jeremy Bante
Jeremy Bante@jbante·
@ubiqunity @mz123 @SoliantMike @FileMaker All those features of fingers affect styluses, mice, and trackballs every bit as much as trackpads. Our control of the position of our fingertips is much finer than the surface of our fingertips.
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Jeremy Bante retweetledi
Michael A. Cohen (NOT TRUMP’S FORMER FIXER)
Imagine the level of whiteness needed to believe this is the first time in generations that law enforcement agencies have misused their power twitter.com/foxnews/status…
Fox News@FoxNews

.@TuckerCarlson: "For the first time in generations Americans have reason to believe that our intelligence and law enforcement agencies gravely misuse the powers we have given them." #Tucker fxn.ws/2E756as

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Jeremy Bante retweetledi
John D. Cook
John D. Cook@JohnDCook·
Started to add text to a report explaining why a graph is misleading. Then a little voice in my head said "Don't explain the graph, you lazy bum. Fix it so it doesn't need to be explained."
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Jeremy Bante retweetledi
Programming Wisdom
Programming Wisdom@CodeWisdom·
"It is far better to improve the effectiveness of testing first than to improve the efficiency of poor testing. Automating chaos just gives faster chaos." - Mark Fewster
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Jeremy Bante
Jeremy Bante@jbante·
Folks assume public code packages are: - Up-to-date - Optimum - Well vetted - Cumulative It’s rare for all of these to be true, and common for all of them to be false. Go ahead and roll your own once in a while.
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Jeremy Bante retweetledi
EFF
EFF@EFF·
In California, you can cover your entire vehicle—including the license plate—to protect your car from the elements. So why can't you cover just the plate when you're parked to protect your privacy? Under S.B. 712, you could. eff.org/deeplinks/2018…
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Jeremy Bante
Jeremy Bante@jbante·
As much as there is wrong with computers, I’m still scared most that there’s really no such thing as "plain text".
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Jeremy Bante retweetledi
John Sindelar
John Sindelar@seedcode·
Video of my #FIleMaker DevCon session is up =) #video" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">seedcode.com/increasing-cod…
John Sindelar tweet media
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Programming Wisdom
Programming Wisdom@CodeWisdom·
“Learning to program has no more to do with designing interactive software than learning to touch type has to do with writing poetry” - Ted Nelson
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Jake VanderPlas
Jake VanderPlas@jakevdp·
Writing your email like "name AT gmail DOT com" is kind of the internet equivalent of hiding your wallet in your shoe at the beach.
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Fred Hasselman
Fred Hasselman@FredHasselman·
@talyarkoni @learnfromerror Don’t blame rules of inference for fundamentally flawed science. Psychology was in crisis before Fisher’s 1st book was even published. See “The historical meaning of the crisis in psychology” ascribed to Vygotsky ~1927 lchc.ucsd.edu/mca/Paper/cris… Bayesian inference will not fix that
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The 100% CI
The 100% CI@the100ci·
Do you think we need publication limits, a construct police and devil's advocates to solve science's problems? Think bigger: we also need spam bots, grayscale computers, secret identical twins, bug bounties and THE OCTAGON! the100.ci/2017/11/23/stu…
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