Some_username_u_have

joined 1 year ago
[–] Some_username_u_have@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Where are the tomatoes?

One of the first things you learn in college-level science is accuracy and precision. A measurement can have a degree of correctness and a degree of exactness about the value. For example a sensor may get the wrong reading 3% of the time. When you have a big pile of readings, you don’t always have the time to validate them all. So, there is some uncertainty that you accept. The same sensor may only be able to give you an accurate reading down to a specific decimal point, which is expressed as precision. Anything less is given as a range in which error exists. These ideas are important, because when you do calculations based on those readings, you have to take the error with you. There may be a point where the value you reach is overshadowed by the magnitude of the error.

I learned the facts of life from watching “The Facts of Life.”

Not absolutely, but within a 95% confidence interval.

This mirrors tabletop D&D, which amounts to how much bullshit can we get away with.

[–] Some_username_u_have@lemmy.world 39 points 1 year ago (7 children)

mAh is a bigger number than Wh and looks better on packages.

Yeah. There are some endings that you can only get from new game +.

[–] Some_username_u_have@lemmy.world 15 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Yeah, well, you know. That’s just like—uh—your opinion, man.

The math is much simpler than it appears. You roll the die and add some other numbers. If you are using an app, you push the button to roll and add.

No, I am not on strattera anymore.

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