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5 votes
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Secrets and lies at Guantanamo Bay: Listening devices, FBI informants, and gag orders… these are just some of the ways that the US is mishandling classified information in the Al Qaeda trials
5 votes -
Fermi problem game thread
I thought it might be fun to make a little game out of asking Fermi problems and trying to work out solutions to others'. What is a Fermi problem? A Fermi problem is (to quote wikipedia ): an...
I thought it might be fun to make a little game out of asking Fermi problems and trying to work out solutions to others'.
What is a Fermi problem?
A Fermi problem is (to quote wikipedia ):
an estimation problem designed to teach dimensional analysis or approximation, and such a problem is usually a back-of-the-envelope calculation. The estimation technique is named after physicist Enrico Fermi as he was known for his ability to make good approximate calculations with little or no actual data. Fermi problems typically involve making justified guesses about quantities and their variance or lower and upper bounds.
Basically, these are questions that would be very difficult to calculate exactly without looking up the answer. The goal is to arrive at a good estimate by making justified assumptions. As such, looking up facts and statistics should be minimized or outright avoided (e.g., if the question is "What is the mass of the water in Lake Michigan?", you shouldn't look up Lake Michigan's volume to aid your answer. This should be estimated from things you know off the top of your head).
The way this thread works
- If you have a Fermi problem, post it as a top level comment.
- If you have a solution to an already posted Fermi problem, post it as a reply to that comment. Be sure to post your reasoning and thought process.
Fermi problems can be fun to come up with, and fun to answer. Examples of Fermi problems might include:
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How many piano tuners are there in Chicago? (this one is apparently one that Fermi came up with himself)
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How many keystrokes occur worldwide, daily?
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What is the mass of the water in Lake Michigan?
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How many cars are there in New York City on a given day?
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How many blades of grass are there on the National Mall?
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How many eggs are consumed in the US each day?
Since many of these have no definitive answer, it is not always possible to score the 'correctness' of an answer. Nonetheless, others can judge when an answer makes reasonable assumptions, so feel free reply to answers with suggestions of which assumptions can be refined or further justified.
21 votes -
Google CEO Admits That It's Impossible To Moderate YouTube Perfectly; CNBC Blasts Him
20 votes -
Should I setup an LLC for my consulting?
I have had a varied work history for the last decade but it has all been W-2. I now find myself doing consulting engagements and I am wondering if I should setup an LLC for this work. My main...
I have had a varied work history for the last decade but it has all been W-2. I now find myself doing consulting engagements and I am wondering if I should setup an LLC for this work. My main concern is actually limiting liability, and of course I am interested in possible tax advantages.
Has anyone else done this? If so, what’s the best way to set this up? Stripe has a program, I imagine legalzoom does as well..
7 votes -
‘The Saudis couldn’t do it without us’: The UK’s true role in Yemen’s deadly war
5 votes -
After the tear gas (retrospective on the Hong Kong protests)
6 votes -
The birth of the electronic beep, the most ubiquitous sound design in the world
10 votes -
How to survive America's kill list
10 votes -
Publishers that closed their comments sections made a colossal mistake
9 votes -
#GenerationLockdown: Two Australians shake up America with viral anti-gun ad
Here's the background story about the video: #GenerationLockdown: Two Australians shake up America with viral anti-gun ad And here's the video itself: Generation Lockdown (The video is not graphic...
Here's the background story about the video: #GenerationLockdown: Two Australians shake up America with viral anti-gun ad
And here's the video itself: Generation Lockdown (The video is not graphic in any way. It's safe for work. Whether it's safe for your emotions is a different matter.)
23 votes -
More cops won’t keep us safe
8 votes -
"By this art you may contemplate the variation of the 23 letters" - An implementation of Borges' Library of Babel
10 votes -
Rare and strange ICD-10 codes
7 votes -
Why Berlin's fifteen-year-old airport has never had a flight
10 votes -
One in two voters don't understand how to vote for the Senate: poll
7 votes -
Secrecy, self-dealing, and greed at the NRA
13 votes -
Stopping Homelessness Before It Starts: Could a new social services model prevent a temporary housing crisis from becoming a persistent condition?
14 votes -
Prospiracy Theories
18 votes -
Reddit custom logos nostalgia
Right now there's a little doodle for the reddit logo to congratulate UVA on winning the NCAA tournament last night and it really brought me back to the days when this was common. Fun times. Of...
Right now there's a little doodle for the reddit logo to congratulate UVA on winning the NCAA tournament last night and it really brought me back to the days when this was common. Fun times. Of course you can't see it from the redesign, fittingly.
You can see a catalog of every one there's been at r/logo.
11 votes -
Finding common ground - 90% rule
3 votes -
What does internationalism actually mean?
7 votes -
How Rupert Murdoch's empire of influence remade the world - a three part report covering the UK, Australia and the USA
19 votes -
Are online travel platforms responsible for your safety?
5 votes -
A masterclass from New Zealand in responding to terror
15 votes -
In 2003, Mark Gardiner wrote a once-in-a-lifetime story about a heroic motorcyclist at the Mont Blanc Tunnel fire. Revisiting the event on its 20th anniversary, he discovers the story was false
9 votes -
"I didn't have control": A 14-year-old on why she quit social media
21 votes -
"What the hell is going on?" A thoughtful and thorough overview of the rising entropy in society by David Perell
20 votes -
How the American media fuels a cycle of violence
3 votes -
Could We Run Modern Society on Human Power Alone?
10 votes -
The Comment Moderator Is The Most Important Job In The World Right Now
28 votes -
Afrostanz episode 2 - sugar spice and Nigerian jollof rice
1 vote -
Anybody's son will do: The process by which civilians are turned into soldiers, people who kill other people. (1983)
10 votes -
Pinpoint your location using only three words
30 votes -
lib.reviews An open source, open data review website for high quality reviews on any topic
8 votes -
The dangerous spread of extremist manifestos
7 votes -
When Male Rape Victims Are Accountable for Child Support
22 votes -
War over being nice
21 votes -
Astronaut (YouTube Toy)
12 votes -
Keep calm and carry on: Managing electricity reliability
6 votes -
Venturing into Sacred Space | Archetype of the Magician
4 votes -
JavaScript toy that demonstrated a model of how demographics cluster
A while back I saw a cool link on Tildes, I think it was before the save feature was implemented, which is why I've lost it. It was an article with an accompanying JavaScript toy to demonstrate...
A while back I saw a cool link on Tildes, I think it was before the save feature was implemented, which is why I've lost it. It was an article with an accompanying JavaScript toy to demonstrate the point: if a system starts clustered, equality alone won't bring the system to equilibrium because the system has momentum. You have to swing hard in the other direction to get to actual equilibrium. (i.e. it was a defense of affirmative action.)
Basically, you set some conditions meant to represent demographics. The people were represented by little squares in the simulation. The conditions were things like "start X% concentrated" and "squares must have 2/3/4 different colored neighbor squares."
I think it was on Medium, but I'm not sure, and I can't for the life of me find it again even after scouring Tildes, Reddit, and Google. Anyone know what I'm talking about and where I can find it again?
4 votes -
Salad Fingers 11: Glass Brother
9 votes -
Paul Manafort in Ukraine
4 votes -
Interesting Wikipedia page mega-thread (post Wikipedia links here)
As suggested in this thread. Post links to interesting wikipedia pages and maybe a tldr with them.
19 votes -
Still simmering: Freedom of navigation in the South China Sea
3 votes -
What are your thoughts on Reddit's r/movies subreddit ?
Personally, I strongly dislike it. Every aspect of every film is way overblown there. If there's a funny scene in a movie, they LITERALLY die laughing and wake their whole neighbourhood up. If...
Personally, I strongly dislike it. Every aspect of every film is way overblown there.
If there's a funny scene in a movie, they LITERALLY die laughing and wake their whole neighbourhood up.
If there's a scene that is in the slightest bit sad, they're going to cry their eyes out for months.
If there's a movie that's decently good, then it's an absolute masterpiece and the best movie of the decade.
And so on... Everything is always really exaggerated.
On top of that, there's always the circlejerk hivemind aspect. Threads are closed after 6 months, so the whole discussion about the film is divided between many threads, but because every thread is small and new, you often get the same fluff comments.
For more popular flims, it is the absolute worst. With half the thread being just funny quotes from the movie with no additional commentary or anything valuable, yet having thousands upon thousands of upvotes. It's kind of sad.
I used to go to IMDb boards, –which, admittedly, had their own issues– but they were still pretty useful for discussion. And shutting people up wasn't as easy as it is on Reddit, so the opinions there were much more varied. However, since they shut them down, Reddit is the closest thing I've found. Moviechat.org is supposed to be a replacement to the IMDb boards, but it's pretty inactive.
So, even though I kind of despise r/movies, I'm sort of forced to use them. But reading it makes me somewhat bitter.
What about you?
13 votes -
The holes in the map: England's unregistered land
6 votes -
Is trade in turmoil a change for justice? The global free trade system is being battered like never before. Can any good come of it?
7 votes -
A most nuclear year: What did we learn about nuclear weapons, deterrence, and arms control in 2018?
6 votes