background preloader

Jtaylor

Facebook Twitter

jamaal

Gallery of Computation | generative artifacts. Basketball Prodigy Brings Hoop Dreams to India | Playbook. With the NBA looking to make inroads in untapped markets around the world, Satnam Singh could hold the key to bringing full-blown basketball fever to the 1.3 billion people of the Indian subcontinent. Singh possesses decent agility for a hulking 7-footer, and his 250-pound frame (though on the light side) gives him a decent foundation for which to dominate down low in the post. However, Singh has plenty of time to fill out his frame with extra muscle. That’s because Satnam Singh is 14 years old. Singh was India’s best-kept hoops secret until he recently spent six weeks training at the IMG Basketball Academy in Bradenton, Florida, working with former college coaches to hone a raw skill set that already has some people calling him India’s answer to Yao Ming.

But if Singh keeps working on his development and practices against legitimate, near-NBA competition, it’s hard to overstate how good this kid can be. Image: Basketball Federation of India. Absinthe - Top 10 Ridiculously Strong Drinks. F Sharp Programming/Values and Functions - Wikibooks, collection of open-content textbooks. Compared to other .NET languages such as C# and VB.Net, F# has a somewhat terse and minimalistic syntax. To follow along in this tutorial, open F# Interactive (fsi) or Visual Studio and run the examples.

Declaring Variables[edit] The most ubiquitous, familiar keyword in F# is the let keyword, which allows programmers to declare functions and variables in their applications. For example: This declares a variable called x and assigns it the value 5. Naturally, we can write the following: let x = 5let y = 10let z = x + y z now holds the value 15. A complete program looks like this: let x = 5let y = 10let z = x + y printfn "x: %i" x printfn "y: %i" y printfn "z: %i" z The statement printfn prints text out to the console window.

Note to F# Interactive users: all statements in F# Interactive are terminated by ;; (two semicolons). Values, Not Variables[edit] In F#, "variable" is a misnomer. Declaring Functions[edit] There is little distinction between functions and values in F#. This program outputs: Ocaml.janestreet.com. As anyone who has looked into functional reactive programming (FRP) knows, there are lots of competing approaches to it, and not a lot of conceptual clarity about how they relate to each other. In this post, I'll try to shed some light, and in particular give you some guide posts for understanding how the different versions of FRP relate to each other. Plus, I'll show some connections to a similar technique called self-adjusting computation (SAC). The analysis here should mostly be credited to Evan Czaplicki, who gave a talk at Jane Street a week ago. Any confusions and mistakes are, of course, my own. In all of this I'm basically going to talk only about discrete FRP.

First, some basics. Now, time to oversimplify. An FRP program effectively ties signals together in a dependency graph, where each signal is either an external input or a derived signal that feeds off of other signals that have already been defined. Here are some properties that you might want from your FRP system:

Practice Interactive Online Actuarial Problems. THE FOURTH QUADRANT: A MAP OF THE LIMITS OF STATISTICS By Nassim Nicholas Taleb. Statistical and applied probabilistic knowledge is the core of knowledge; statistics is what tells you if something is true, false, or merely anecdotal; it is the "logic of science"; it is the instrument of risk-taking; it is the applied tools of epistemology; you can't be a modern intellectual and not think probabilistically—but... let's not be suckers.

The problem is much more complicated than it seems to the casual, mechanistic user who picked it up in graduate school. Statistics can fool you. In fact it is fooling your government right now. It can even bankrupt the system (let's face it: use of probabilistic methods for the estimation of risks did just blow up the banking system). The current subprime crisis has been doing wonders for the reception of any ideas about probability-driven claims in science, particularly in social science, economics, and "econometrics" (quantitative economics). Are we using models of uncertainty to produce certainties?

The Dangers Of Bogus Math The Map. Michael Steele's Academic Misadventure - Raw Fisher. Michael Steele's Academic Misadventure He hasn't exactly held high office, and he's neither a policy leader nor a brilliant campaigner, but former Maryland lieutenant governor and Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele is a hugely charming storyteller, and in a video to appear this weekend on C-SPAN, Steele keeps an audience of high school students spellbound with the scary yet inspirational tale of the time he was booted out of Johns Hopkins University. The heroine of Steele's story--as is often the case--is his mother, Maebell Turner, who managed to scare him onto the right course without ever deigning to look at her son or to stop stirring the grits. Steele told the story to students at Woodson Senior High School in the District, as part of C-SPAN's "Students and Leaders" program, which brings big-name politicians, journalists and others to five D.C. public schools.

In seven minutes, Steele spells out how he "partied my behind off. Does the U.S. Produce Too Many Scientists? Editor's Note: Beryl Lieff Benderly, a fellow of the American Associaton for the Advancement of Science, writes about scientific labor force and early career issues in the Science Careers section of Science.

In this rough-draft article, she argues that the scientific labor market is broken, that the U.S. educational system actually produces too many qualified researchers for too few positions, and that a perverse funding structure perpetuates the problem, among other points. We'd like your views on this topic and suggestions on ways to further develop the article. Please use the Comments section at the bottom of the page. Here are a few questions to get you started: After reading the article, do you disagree with the "almost universally accepted" idea that there is a national "technical talent dearth"?

What was your reaction to the assertion that the decline of white males in science indicates a drop in the desirability of science careers? Many Applicants, Few Academic Posts. How to Find Local Foreclosed or Foreclosure Real Estate Properties. How to Find Foreclosed Homes for Free. Online Database Software - Zoho Creator Pricing Plan. Brandon Taelor Aviram | Photographer | Retoucher | New York City | 347.688.2868. 5 Creepy Ways Animal Societies Are Organizing. One thing we've learned during our extensive research here at Cracked is that animals are more and more amazing the more you learn about them. But there's a point on the graph where they're a little too amazing, and then it crosses into "unsettling. " So we're not sure how to feel about the fact that... Chimpanzees Go to War You'd think "Chimpanzee Researcher" would be the most hilarious job in the world, what with the subjects always putting on people clothes and pretending to smoke pipes.

But during a 10-year study of a community of chimps in Uganda, scientists found something terrifying. More terrifying than the Congo chimp's alliance with the Clown People. Every once in a while groups of strong chimp males would form up and head north, toward the border between their territory and the land of the neighboring tribe. Then they did it again. You expect this kind of bullshit from apes. Source This isn't some freak occurrence, either. Ooh-ooh-ah-ah! And while we're on primates... Dumbasses. Time.co is for sale | DomainMarket.com.

Website creation apps

Current events. Science and Technology. Interactive Events.