Mooks79
Mooks79 t1_j6wo3cg wrote
Reply to comment by pootis_engage in [OC] Number of English Words by Length in Letters and Syllables by OfficialWireGrind
WWW is a famous example where it’s actually less syllables to pronounce the full phrase - World Wide Web.
Mooks79 t1_j1dtis7 wrote
Reply to comment by Eric1969 in Football betting experiment: what if I consistently bet against the odds, on the least likely match outcome? This is the English Premier League. What happened in 2019/20? (sorry for the third similar post, I test different competitions incrementally after the jaw-dropping World Cups' results) [OC] by ikashnitsky
Finally got round to knocking up a simulation, can confirm that the two methods (randomly choosing whether to bet H or T, or using the lagged counts) both give the same (0.5) win rate, as expected. Indeed, any strategy (e.g. always choosing H or T) will yield the same win rate for a truly random coin. I suspect there was a slight glitch in your friend’s simulation. Happy to share (R) code and plot(s) if you want.
Mooks79 t1_izt8d0z wrote
Reply to comment by Eric1969 in Football betting experiment: what if I consistently bet against the odds, on the least likely match outcome? This is the English Premier League. What happened in 2019/20? (sorry for the third similar post, I test different competitions incrementally after the jaw-dropping World Cups' results) [OC] by ikashnitsky
They should be random enough, albeit improperly generated random numbers could be a cause. My money is on them setting up the simulation incorrectly, though. When I say incorrectly, I mean it could be that they haven’t set the simulation up quite as they think they have.
Mooks79 t1_izt6qzt wrote
Reply to comment by Eric1969 in Football betting experiment: what if I consistently bet against the odds, on the least likely match outcome? This is the English Premier League. What happened in 2019/20? (sorry for the third similar post, I test different competitions incrementally after the jaw-dropping World Cups' results) [OC] by ikashnitsky
Ah! If I were you I would stick with your original thinking as I’m reasonably confident there was a coding issue or the set-up of the simulation wasn’t quite what it should be. If I have time I might try and knock something together myself, but that’s a big if as I’ve got a mental couple of weeks.
Mooks79 t1_izt3zcr wrote
Reply to comment by Eric1969 in Football betting experiment: what if I consistently bet against the odds, on the least likely match outcome? This is the English Premier League. What happened in 2019/20? (sorry for the third similar post, I test different competitions incrementally after the jaw-dropping World Cups' results) [OC] by ikashnitsky
I’m with you. I think if your friend’s code showed otherwise then there’s a flaw in the code and it’s not doing quite what it should be. Would they be willing to share it?
Mooks79 t1_izsvfub wrote
Reply to comment by Eric1969 in Football betting experiment: what if I consistently bet against the odds, on the least likely match outcome? This is the English Premier League. What happened in 2019/20? (sorry for the third similar post, I test different competitions incrementally after the jaw-dropping World Cups' results) [OC] by ikashnitsky
>I actually was debating this with a friend so vigorously that he coded a program to compare yhe wins of betting randomly or on lagging possible outcomes of a randomly generated number. Betting on lagging outcomes brought more wins.
Can you elaborate more on what you mean? I think I misunderstand you somehow as it seems to me betting on lagging outcomes cannot outperform betting randomly in the long run or the outcome is not random (or there’s a coding / concept error).
>Professional sports is not quite random though.
Absolutely.
Mooks79 t1_izsp7u1 wrote
Reply to comment by Eric1969 in Football betting experiment: what if I consistently bet against the odds, on the least likely match outcome? This is the English Premier League. What happened in 2019/20? (sorry for the third similar post, I test different competitions incrementally after the jaw-dropping World Cups' results) [OC] by ikashnitsky
The latter is because of the former.
Mooks79 t1_ixud2qj wrote
Reply to comment by drsimonz in Is Linux still vastly preferred for deep learning over Windows? by moekou
Even more recently MS have provided their own solution for Windows 10 (provided you’re running a sufficiently updated version) and 11, which supports both X11 and Wayland.
See here albeit this document is slightly out of date because, as of just a few days ago, they now support Windows 10 from 19.044 (21H2) onwards iirc. Edit: as per here.
Mooks79 t1_jdz4tgl wrote
Reply to Compare Public Transport Network Connectivity In 10 European Countries [OC] by TravelTime_LKB
This doesn’t really say a lot unless it factors in frequency somehow, maybe the line alpha is number of journeys per day or something. Not of people, I mean if availability. In the U.K. I can see lines in areas that the reality is there’s one a day, which is almost useless, yet this puts the route on a par with others that may have 2 an hour.