Honestly sounds like it has great potential.
Repeating digits have been acknowledged.
Honestly sounds like it has great potential.
Repeating digits have been acknowledged.
True, but what would be common interests of female autists? Biology? Tumblr?
Thanks Quinny, but uploading to lemmy seems to automatically convert to jpeg.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nominative_determinism
Es gibt sehr witzige Studien in dem Artikel.
You’re absolutely right! I’ve edited the meme to contain your suggestions.
A shame, you seemed an honest man.
I wanted to represent science, math and engineering with those.
Couldn’t nicely put pngs with transparent backgrounds in there for these two, so they both got white backgrounds and put next to each other.
It’s true that NNs are strong at spotting patterns in masses of data, but trading is a particularly hard problem for this kind of task because the market constantly adapts to its participants. If other traders have found a pattern, it will already be priced in when you try to make money off it, and your strategy will fail. And since trading is a worldwide competition with billions of dollars to be won, you are naturally competing against teams of the best of the best who are willing to put massive resources into their algorithm development, computing, and data acquisition. Therefore the chances for someone like us to find an algorithm that systematically beats them is very low.
So for any young math/CS nerd who comes across this thread and wants to try their luck, be aware of the difficulty before you invest any real money, and learn about the merits of passive investing.


Same, have you tried WaniKani for learning the Kanji and vocabulary? It’s great.


There’s a Linux package manager joke to be made here, unfortunately I’m too sleepy to come up with it.
The proof is trivial and has been left out as an exercise for the reader.


I think you mean tuples, because (1) == 1, but (1, ) == tuple([1]).


Many programming languages allow “trailing commas”:
my_list = [ 1, 2, 3, ]
This is wonderful because you can treat the last element like the previous ones instead of having to make an exception. I use it all the time, even when it provides no benefit, and I think we should even start allowing it in natural language.
That’s the plot of Uzumaki.


Hey, you’re finally awake.
Certain ich_iel posters are gonna have a field day with this image.