Buffy: You tossed that vamp like he was a... little teeny vamp. Riley: You wanna go again? C'mon. I bet this place is just teeming with aerodynamic vampires.

'Help'


Spike's Bitches 48: I Say, We Go Out There, and Kick a Little Demon Ass.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


omnis_audis - Mar 04, 2014 12:25:16 pm PST #9709 of 30002
omnis, pursue. That's an order from a shy woman who can use M-16. - Shir

Ha, one of the faculty (who was a math major in undergrad days) asked in his Facebook, and one of his friends responded [inserted sic's as needed]

One is seven individuals will require an appendectomy during their lifetime. Average American life expectancy is 78.64 years, or about 4103 weeks. In any given week, there's a 0.021% chance that once of your students will need an appendectomy. In any given week, there's a 0.017% chance one of the remain 5 students will need an appendectomy. In any given week, there's a 0.0000036% chance 2 students will need an appendectomy. Assuming a 3 year program, with an academic year consisting of, let's say 32 weeks per year (96 total), that makes for a 0.00035% chance that 2 out of 6 MFA students would need an appendectomy in the same week, or about 1 in 300,000.


billytea - Mar 04, 2014 1:00:08 pm PST #9710 of 30002
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

In any given week, there's a 0.0000036% chance 2 students will need an appendectomy. Assuming a 3 year program, with an academic year consisting of, let's say 32 weeks per year (96 total), that makes for a 0.00035% chance that 2 out of 6 MFA students would need an appendectomy in the same week, or about 1 in 300,000.

I don't think this is correct. Essentially you're looking for the probability that (X = 2), where X is a binomial distribution B(6, p), and p is the probability that a single given student needs an appendectomy in a single given week. (Strictly speaking, I think you want the probability that (X >= 2), but the difference is utterly negligible.)

Accepting the same starting data, we have p = 1/(7 * 4103) = 0.000035. This won't be quite right, as I strongly doubt that the risk of appendicitis is constant throughout one's life. But it's our best estimate right now. Let q = (1 - p) = almost 1. By the binomial distribution,

Pr(X = 2) = (6 2) * p^2 * q^4

That (6 2) is supposed to be combinatorial notation - that is, the number of ways you can select two students from a pool of 6. It equals 15.

Anyway, you run through that formula, and you find that the probability of two afflicted students in any one given week is about 1.82 * 10^-8, or 1 in 55 million. (I'll call it P.) Which is to say, not very likely. Assuming that there are 96 weeks where this could happen, and that each week is more or less independent of the others (not quite true, if in one week two students need an appendectomy, there are only at most four students left at risk in any future weeks; but close enough for us), then the odds that you'll be in here one week asking "What are the odds?" are:

1 - (1 - P)^96 = 1 in 573,000.

So I think the Facebook friend overstated the odds by close to double. I suspect this is because he neglected to notice that his method of picking students (first one at random, then the second one at random) double-counts every possible pair. You could wind up with, say, students B and E by picking B and then E, or by picking E and then B. The friend's methodology adds the chance of B-then-E, and then also adds the chance of E-then-B; but really, this is the same event (B-and-E together), and should only be counted once.


Laura - Mar 04, 2014 1:32:29 pm PST #9711 of 30002
Our wings are not tired.

swoons


Connie Neil - Mar 04, 2014 1:33:22 pm PST #9712 of 30002
brillig

I started reading that and my brain fuzzed out into Peanuts Grown Up Voice "honk honk honk".


meara - Mar 04, 2014 1:34:08 pm PST #9713 of 30002

Yeah, I didn't really follow that but am very impressed!


Atropa - Mar 04, 2014 1:49:30 pm PST #9714 of 30002
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

I started reading that and my brain fuzzed out into Peanuts Grown Up Voice "honk honk honk".

Same here. And I don't think it's entirely to do with the lingering anethesia or pain meds. (Whoo, wisdom teeth extraction. I feel very floppy.)


DCJensen - Mar 04, 2014 2:14:03 pm PST #9715 of 30002
All is well that ends in pizza.

Andrea has asked me to query the hive mind for these questions I am being asked in applying for a position at a credit union (ours, btw) call center.

1. What inspires you to want to work at [credit union] and how does this align with your values and career aspirations?

2. Describe a time where you did something unexpected for someone you did not know. What did you do and what was the outcome?

3. What do you feel is the difference between customer service and building relationships? Please explain.

4. From your experience, what situations did you find it difficult to adapt to? Please explain.

Any suggestions for the responses? Pitfalls? Grabbers?

#2 and #4 seem the biggest minefields.

And people said essay questions wouldn't come up in real life...


brenda m - Mar 04, 2014 2:29:37 pm PST #9716 of 30002
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

I started reading that and my brain fuzzed out into Peanuts Grown Up Voice "honk honk honk".

Which I take as evidence that it is likely correct. Good job, bt!


meara - Mar 04, 2014 3:49:32 pm PST #9717 of 30002

For #4 just make sure you follow what you had trouble adapting to with what you did to change that/adapt/not have that problem in the future. That's key.


omnis_audis - Mar 04, 2014 3:56:59 pm PST #9718 of 30002
omnis, pursue. That's an order from a shy woman who can use M-16. - Shir

bt! That is great. I understood, maybe half of it. But, it's the end of the work day, so, brain. not fully working.