Multicore Processor

1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna

Is the New Place more populous than the original Place?

New Jersey (9.2M) > Jersey (100K)

New York (city) (8.8M) > York (150K)

England (55M) > New England (14M)

Hampshire (1.3M) = New Hampshire (1.3M)

New Zealand (5.1M) > Zeeland (380K)

Scotland (5.4M) > Nova Scotia (960K) > New Caledonia (230K)

Britain (60M) > New Britain (510K)

Mexico (120M) > New Mexico (2.1M)

Delhi (16M) contains New Delhi (240K)

New Orleans (380K) > Orléans (110K)

Guinea (region) > New Guinea (14M) > Guinea (country) (13M)

New Brunswick (820K) > Brunswick (city) (240K)

New South Wales (8.1M) > Wales (3.2M)

In my latest Victoria 3 game, playing as independent Texas:

Why is my GDP stagnant even though my building productivity is through the roof?

Oh, it’s because all those wars I’m fighting in South America to get more puppets are generating >100k casualties each, and now my entire workforce is only 500k men. The line on the population graph is smoothly going up, but now my dependents:workforce ratio has gone from 3:1 to 5:1

Kind of surprises me what kinds of things Copilot knows.

Today I copied over a list benchmark “average human” score for Atari games from a paper, and Copilot autocompleted the majority of them either correctly or close enough that it could have just been from a different source.

Some institutions work like self-fulfilling prophecies. If everyone thinks a bank will keep operating, it keeps operating. If a lot of people think the bank is about to go bust, there’s a run on the bank and it goes bust.

A prediction market is an anti-self-fulfilling prophecy. If everyone thinks the market probability is already correct, then no one will bet and the probability won’t be corrected. If a lot of people think the probability is wrong, they’ll bet and it will be corrected.

I came out of the Mario movie with two thoughts:

-Wow, the amount of background detail and subtle references in every single scene is amazing, I don’t think any movie I’ve ever seen has been good at this specific aspect.

-I feel like I already saw this exact movie, back when it was called The Lego Movie.