For those that have mentioned a lack of a ruler, I used this one online: http://iruler.net/.
Might be worth it to link in the survey, if it’s still editable.
For those that have mentioned a lack of a ruler, I used this one online: http://iruler.net/.
Might be worth it to link in the survey, if it’s still editable.
I have done a number of things.
I have a problem staying awake when I drive. Unrelated, I wanted more intellectual stimulation in my life. So I started downloading podcasts to listen to while I drive instead of music, which, while not the intended benefit, engage my brain and keep me more awake. Intellectual stimulation is up too.
I started getting back into trying to read and post (albeit under the name of a new account not tied closely to my real name) on LW, tumblr, and a couple others.
I got a promotion (well, I’m training for the promotion that I’ll get in a couple months) for a job I’m really enjoying. I was disliking my previous job more and more, so this is a welcome change.
For at least 10 years, I’ve wondered why men don’t wear skirts, because I’ve always imagined that they are fantastically comfortable. It only recently occurred to me that, as a human with money, I can give that money to people who will deliver skirts to my front door, and I can wear them around the house for increased comfort without embarrassment because I live alone. I can officially confirm that they are wonderfully comfortable, at least in my opinion. However this does run contrary to the opinion of, well, pretty much every woman I’ve talked to.
You should probably Rot13 this. I scanned the comments before I did the survey, and I couldn’t remember why I was so confident in the correct answer, but I was.
I have a question about the Effective Altruism community that’s always bothered me. Why does the movement not seem to have much overlap with the frugality/early retirement movement? Is it just that I haven’t seen it? I read a number of sites (My favorite being Mr Money Mustache, who retired at age 30 on a modest engineer’s salary) that focus on early retirement through (many would say extreme) frugality. I wouldn’t expect that this, or something close to it, would be hard for most people in the demographic of this site. It seems to me that the two movements have a lot in common, mainly attempting to get people to be more responsible with their money. If you take as an axiom that, for members of the EA movement, marginal income/savings equals increased donations, it seems as though there is tremendous opportunity for synergies between the two.
I’m losing a lot of confidence in the digit ratio/masculinity femininity stuff. I’m not seeing a number of things I’d expect to see.
First, my numbers for correlations don’t match up with yours. With filters on for female gendered, and answering all of BemSexRoleF, BemSexRoleM, RightHand, and LeftHand, I get a correlation of only −0.34 for RightHand and BemSexRoleM, not −0.433 as you say. I get various other differences as well, all weaker correlations than you describe. Perhaps differences in filtering explain this? -.34 vs -.433 seems to be high for this to be true though.
Second, Bem masculinity and femininity actually seem to have a positive correlation, albeit tiny. So more masculine people are… more feminine? This makes no sense and makes me more likely to throw out the entire data set.
Thirdly, I don’t see any huge differences between Cisgender Men, Transgender Men, Cisgender Women, or Transgender Women on digit ratios. I would expect to see this as well. I get 95% confidence intervals (mean +/- 3*sigma/sqrt(n), formatted [Lower Right—Upper Right / Lower Left—Upper Left]) for the categories as follows:
F (Cis): [0.949 − 0.996 / 0.956 − 1.004]
M (Cis): [0.962 − 0.978 / 0.963 − 0.979]
M (Trans): [0.907 − 0.988 / 0.818 − 1.070]
F (Trans): [0.935 − 1.002 / 0.935 − 1.019]
There’s pretty significant overlap between all 4 categories. I made a dotplot that I can’t upload and it doesn’t look to me like there’s any difference in the distributions, but I don’t think we have enough of a sample size to have a meaningful distribution on anything except cis males and maybe cis females.
Lastly, I guess I just skipped over the favorite LessWrong post? Not sure what I would have answered, but it would have been either When None Dare Urge Restraint or Intellectual Hipsters and Metacontrarians. Surprised to see neither of those on the list.
Edit: As always, thanks for doing this!
I guess I’ll introduce myself? Ordinary story, came from HPMOR, blah blah blah. I was active on 1.0 for awhile when I was in college, but changed usernames when I decided I didn’t want my real name to be googleable. I doubt anyone really remembers it anyway. Quit going there when 1.0 became not so much of a thing anymore. Hung out with some of the people on rationalist Tumblr for awhile before that stopped being so much of a thing too. If you recognize the name, it’s probably from there. Got on Twitter recently, but that’s more about college football than it is the rationalist community. Was vaguely aware of the LW 2.0 effort and poked around a little when it was launched, but never stuck. I think I saw something about the books on Twitter and thought that was cool. Came back this week and was surprised at how active it was. So if this is to say anything it’s to say good job to the team on growing the site back up.
On a side note, I used to live in rural Louisiana, which pretty obviously didn’t have a rationalist community (Though I did meet a guy who lived a couple hours away once) and now I’m in Richmond, VA. Most surveys I’ve seen still show me as the only one here, (There’s obviously the DC group, but nothing my way.) but if any of you are ever around after this whole “global pandemic” thing is over, hit me up.
To me, it’s more about financial independence than early retirement. Financial independence gives you the options to do a lot of different things; “retire” and volunteer for an effective charity, continue working and donate 100% of your income to charity, continue working and balloon your nest egg to establish a trust to be donated to an effective charity upon your death, etc. The knowledge that you are 100% financially independent gives tremendous security that (as well as it’s other benefits, such as decreasing stress) allows someone to comfortably and without consideration give large amounts of money.
Hi. I’m Baisius. I came here, like most, through HPMOR. I’ve read a lot of the sequences and they’ve helped me reanalyze the things I believe and why I believe them. I’ve been lurking here for awhile, but I’ve never really felt I had anything to add to the site, content wise. That’s changed, however—I just launched a blog. The blog is generally LW themed, so I thought it appropriate. I wouldn’t ordinarily advertise for it, but I would particularly like some help on one of the problems I explored in my first post. (see footnote 3)
One of the things that’s bothered me about PredictionBook, and one of the reasons I don’t use it much, is that its analysis seems a bit… lacking. In the post, I tried to come up with a rigorous way of comparing sets of predictions to see which are more accurate. I did this by looking at the distribution of residuals (outcome—predicted probability) for a set of predictions. The odd thing was that when I looked at the variance, the inverse of the variance showed some very odd patterns. It’s all there in the post, but if anyone who knows a bit more math than I do could explain it, I’d really appreciate it.
“It’s clear that [testing] demand greatly exceeds supply.”
Is this true? Are people that want tests unable to get them? Or do people just not want to get tested? Or did we tell people early in the pandemic that testing capacity was limited and that they shouldn’t get tested unless they’ve been exposed and people still believe that now? I suspect it’s the last.
I’ve had three tests, all paid for 100% by insurance (I think it would be $64 w/o insurance, IIRC). Turn around time on the first (early June) was three days, second (Nov) was three days, and the third (a few days ago) was a day and a half. The only thing I had to do each time was tell them that I was exposed at work, which was varyingly true. My brother gets tested every other week through work. Fiancée got tested at CVS and they didn’t even ask her that screening question. I haven’t had a single experience leading me to believe tests are in short supply.
Also, yes, air ducts can almost certainly spread the virus, and six feet is not a magic number.
Don’t tell my employer that. The guy in the office next to me got it (from a meeting at work) and gave it to the girl across from me. There are a total of four offices in my building. I was deemed “not to be a close contact”.
The money question to me WRT the UK strain is what it’s doing in other countries. Are other countries where the strain has been detected seeing the same rise in cases? Are they doing enough sequencing to know it even if they are?
Two notes:
I’m in a pretty high tax bracket, but I still do Roth IRA/401k contributions. This is because if you are maxing out your accounts (which if your goal is “early” retirement, you almost certainly will be) you are protecting more real dollars from taxes. The contribution limits are the same regardless of whether you contribute on a traditional or Roth basis. If I can protect $6000 and never have to pay taxes on it or protect $6000 that I’ll eventually have to pay taxes on, I’d rather take the tax penalty now and protect more real dollars. I never see this discussed anywhere, but it’s my primary motivating factor in doing Roth. There is also the flexibility consideration which you mention. (There are also more advanced strategies such as backdoor Roths and mega-backdoor Roths that you didn’t really touch on, but they’re not super important.)
One thing you don’t discuss is the tax advantages of owning a home. All interest you pay (in the US) is tax deductible. Commentary on the prudence of that aside, it doesn’t seem likely to change any time soon. Besides which, interest rates are currently so low that it probably makes sense to finance other items as well, even if you have the ability to pay for them out of pocket. But I’m not up to speed on car/student/etc. loans, so that might not be true for other asset classes. My recently refinanced interest rate on my home is 2.5%. At a rate like that they are literally giving money away, if you assume 3% inflation every year (admittedly a debatable assumption). If you are risk-tolerant (most people aren’t risk tolerant enough, remember) you should generally be happy to finance debt to invest the returns in the market.
I’m not sure any of those things measure incorruptibility.
Yes.
What are some strategies for pursuing this? I considered trying to write something, but it seems that the central message of “people are kind of bad at spending money efficiently and you are a people and you are probably bad at it too” is hard to convey without being rude, and unlikely to succeed. Particularly when you’re, in effect, going to be asking them to give their money away instead of saving it for retirement.
I downloaded the dataset from OurWorldinData and estimated the % of cases coming from the UK strain based on the GSAID chart (Note: It’s unclear what exactly they mean by “Week 47”, so the percentages might be off by up to 7 days, but I did my best.) If there is better data on this, (In particular, an updated GSAID dataset) please let me know, I couldn’t find any. I would be happy to redo the below analysis with data past 11⁄16.
On the below charts, the top chart is total Covid cases. The bottom chart is total Covid cases broken down by strain. I started this by saying I thought you were overreacting, but then I deleted that sentence, because now I’m not sure. One thing you will notice that is lost in the above is that the emergence of the new strain was immediately followed by a large reduction in total cases. It was already at 10% of sequenced strains by ~11/16. This gives me some hope that things are not as dire as maybe they appear. Without the data from 11⁄17 onward, it seems really hard to say what’s happening in the UK with respect to the new strain. But I’m finding several sources now that are saying current infections in the UK are ~50% new strain. So that would be consistent with the possibility that lockdowns leveled out the old strain infections at ~15000 per day and the rise over the last few weeks is all attributable to the new strain. But I think ultimately the data I have is inconclusive.
May want to add Slate Star Codex as an exception to the referrals question.
Time in community question needs to be updated to 7 years for the start of the community.
Might be worth it to specify aggregate Karma if you have multiple accounts. (This is an account that I started using after I decided I no longer wanted to use my real name. I mostly lurk anyway, though.)
It would be worth it to add a “no meetups in my area” option to the meetups question.
The header for part eight is listed twice.
I found my favorite strategy for responding to salary questions on r/negotiation several months back: “Right now I’m focused on trying to figure out if this job is a good fit for the direction I want to take my career. If we both decide it is, I’m sure we can come to an understanding on salary.”
Then, if they press: “Well I don’t think it’s fair to consider just salary in comparing job offers. I’d have to look at a total holistic benefits package to fairly compare two offers.”
Then if they insist: “Look, you and I both know that my naming a desired salary puts me at a negotiating disadvantage. Please don’t ask again.” At this point, you probably don’t want to work at this company anyway.
One of the differences is that transmission is, for obvious reasons, much, much easier to control on an island. Hawaii isn’t doing nearly as badly as the rest of the United States, for example.
Completed. Very excited to see the digit ratio data.