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Only 17 more. 16 now...
Nish
If I am awake and my eyes are closed, it does not necessarily mean that I am thinking of naked women.
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You think we could push it up there?
I don't think Chris would appreciate it though :-P
James
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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James T. Johnson wrote:
You think we could push it up there?
We could, though I wonder whether we should!
James T. Johnson wrote:
I don't think Chris would appreciate it though
Yeah, the suggestions forum is basically a direct web based mailer for him
Nish
If I am awake and my eyes are closed, it does not necessarily mean that I am thinking of naked women.
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Nish [BusterBoy] wrote:
though I wonder whether we should!
Questions, questions, questions... Hmmm, well it wouldnn't be that many messages, compared to what he gets daily anyway
James - j/k Chris
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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James T. Johnson wrote:
Questions, questions, questions... Hmmm, well it wouldnn't be that many messages, compared to what he gets daily anyway
At least, we are not asking whether DirectX works, like that other fella did?
Nish
If I am awake and my eyes are closed, it does not necessarily mean that I am thinking of naked women.
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lol, true
I wonder if Chris gets all messages e-mail to him, or only new topics
James
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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I get 'em all
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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Poor Chris, getting all of Nish's and my silly chatter :-P
James
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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James T. Johnson wrote:
Poor Chris, getting all of Nish's and my silly chatter
Hey, I disagree with your supposition that my chatter is silly.
Nish
If I am awake and my eyes are closed, it does not necessarily mean that I am thinking of naked women.
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Just went to update my user profile, and noticed there was no 'Win32' checkbox in the Interests section. Um, do you suppose we could have one - I mean, there are folks who might select this over MFC.
Also, a 'Small shiny objects' choice might be nice. Course, that may be just me...
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Hmmm... well, I want to thank everyone for that wonderful round of indifference.
Chris, you really should pick up on this - and judging by the flood of responses I'm getting, I'd say there's a lot of pretty ticked off DOS 4.0 Shell programmers out there too...
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Your welcome Tim
Seriously though, I didn't see your post because I was gone almost all of yesterday.
I honestly didn't know it was possible for someone to spend 2 hours looking at artificial flowers. From now on, the next time my mom asks me if I want to go with her and my grandma shopping I'm gonna run far far away.
James
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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Jeez, I really sounded like an a**hole :-P
Not the intended effect
James
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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James T. Johnson wrote:
Jeez, I really sounded like an a**hole
Oh good gosh no - I didn't see it like that at all.
But, no time to chat - I seem to have got the Pick Basic dudes all stirred up now...
Where will it end!
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Hey Tim,
You're absolutely right - but at the moment it's sunny, it's Sunday, and I'm listening to some very smooth trance while making blueberry muffins.
Ping me on Monday
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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Chris Maunder wrote:
making blueberry muffins
[homer]mmmmmmmm, blueberry muffins [/homer]
I surprised my family this morning, I actually cooked breakfast!
James
Sonork: Hasaki
"I left there in the morning
with their God tucked underneath my arm
their half-assed smiles and the book of rules.
So I asked this God a question
and by way of firm reply,
He said - I'm not the kind you have to wind up on Sundays."
"Wind Up" from Aqualung, Jethro Tull 1971
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Blueberries? In Canberra? I thought they just had canberries!
HA! Get it? Canberra - canberries?
Ok... well, whatEVER!
Like, tanks, eh. And resevoir.
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win32 has been added. Yell if you want more categories that are vaguely to do with Visual Studio development
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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Chris Maunder wrote:
win32 has been added.
You _are_ the best.
Chris Maunder wrote:
Yell if you want more categories that are vaguely to do with Visual Studio development
Hmmm... are you saying that 'Small shiny objects' might not be right up there on the must have list? Fair enough, seeing as how you refrained from adding 'Smooth trance'.
Mush tanks again.
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As long as you're working on CP.Net...
What if the article ratings showed the standard or average deviation along with the average? These values are pretty easy to calculate and can give you a good idea as to the accuracy of the beloved 'average' value.
If you're worried about scaring people away with terms like "standard deviation", you could calculate the StdDev then scale to a 1-10 range and call it something like "confidence" and represent it with a little graph or something.
Here's a little example:
Article A: 3,4,4,5,4,4,3,3,3,3,3,2,2,5,4,3,3
Article B: 5,5,5,5,5,5,5,5,4,4,4,1,1,1,1,1,1
Take these two sets of hypothetical ratings, for example. They have the same average (3.41), but B should probably be considered a more highly-thought-of article. Those 1's in B look out of line with the the rest of the values - it should be rated much higher. The ratings for article A, though, make sense - it's mostly 3's and 4's.
A avg: 3.41
B avg: 3.41
Through the magic of Excel, we get the Average and Standard Deviations:
A AvgDev: 0.719
B AvgDev: 1.418
A StdDev: 0.870
B StdDev: 1.660
Each of these values is much higher for Article B. This confirms that the ratings for A are more consistent than those for B. You could interpret this to mean that A's average more accurately reflects the majority of its ratings than B's average does for B's ratings.
This is all basic statistics, nothing crazy.
And here's the "confidence" thing i was talking about. I'll just scale the StdDev to a 0.0 to 1.0 range.
A Confidence: 0.692
B Confidence: 0.412
Or, A's confidence is at 70% while B's is at 41%.
Conf = (2.83-StdDev)/2.83 . 2.83 is the maximum StdDev for data in the range 1 to 5 (i think ).
(this "confidence" is just something i made up, it's not related to any real statistical calculation)
it's friday, i'm bored
-c
"What the hell are you getting so upset about? I thought you didn't believe in God".
"I don't," she sobbed, bursting violently into tears, "but the God I don't believe in is a good God, a just God, a merciful God. He's not the mean and stupid God you make Him out to be".
-- Joseph Heller
Smaller Animals Software, Inc.
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You could also confuse the hell out of everyone with the equation for calculating the standard deviation:
SD = √Σ(x - avg.(x))²/n
Chris Losinger wrote:
this "confidence" is just something i made up, it's not related to any real statistical calculation
There are such things as confidence intervals that allow you to represent your data. We can say that a random variable will fall within these two ranges of my dataset(SomeNumber, SomeOtherNumber) with XX% confidence.
These are calculations that have existed for a long time.
Nick Parker
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yeah, i knew "confidence" was a reserved work, so to speak, in statistics. i just didn't remember what it was for .
-c
"What the hell are you getting so upset about? I thought you didn't believe in God".
"I don't," she sobbed, bursting violently into tears, "but the God I don't believe in is a good God, a just God, a merciful God. He's not the mean and stupid God you make Him out to be".
-- Joseph Heller
Smaller Animals Software, Inc.
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No Problem, I forgot to mention in the last post that it was a really good idea. Thanks Chris
Nick Parker
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This won't help if we get some idiot voting 10 1's. It's also going to add a lot of storage/processing time.
But - definitely something to think about.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
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Chris
Instead of showing the average just show the total. Thus even a 1 is useful. If someone gives me a 1 my total still goes up. Don't show the number of votes or the average. The advantage with this is that now nobody can artificially bring an article down.
A nice total-count system is a lot better than an abused-average system.
And perhaps one more rule. Only members with at least 150 posts and 2 months of membership are allowed to vote. This helps to avoid the [sign up, vote, sign up again...] situations.
Regards
Nish
If I am awake and my eyes are closed, it does not necessarily mean that I am thinking of naked women.
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