For example, you don’t mention that your own score is 3⁄4 of your own. Since you don’t get extra points for a similar point (which it is), you have to be a single person or even a group of like-minded people, and your percentage of your resources is 10%, while your ratio is 9⁄6 of your own.
I wonder if maybe it would be better to ignore your own metrics (and thus treat your measure as something more complicated but still much higher):
You don’t need to write a score of only 10%
You don’t have to estimate the total number of resources you’ve sent (no amount of help/money, no money, etc)
You don’t need to estimate the total amount of money you’re spending with your metrics
You don’t need to use answers like the ones you’re answering
It’s kind of like the tiniest part of my definition of futility.
Markdown auto-increments numbered points while ignoring the actual number. I often number my numbered markdown lists with all
1.
’s for this reason.For example, you don’t mention that your own score is 3⁄4 of your own. Since you don’t get extra points for a similar point (which it is), you have to be a single person or even a group of like-minded people, and your percentage of your resources is 10%, while your ratio is 9⁄6 of your own.
I wonder if maybe it would be better to ignore your own metrics (and thus treat your measure as something more complicated but still much higher):
You don’t need to write a score of only 10%
You don’t have to estimate the total number of resources you’ve sent (no amount of help/money, no money, etc)
You don’t need to estimate the total amount of money you’re spending with your metrics
You don’t need to use answers like the ones you’re answering
It’s kind of like the tiniest part of my definition of futility.