dlthurston
DL Thurston
dlthurston

Then he should be less of a nerd!

“Don’t get me started on Doctor Strange and that little nerd back on Earth-199999.”

They said she was in there when first introducing Brett Spiner v 5.0, and then didn’t mention her again when discussing the roster up in there last episode.

I think I’m the only person watching Hello, Tomorrow so I hope they wrap the season in a satisfying way and don’t leave it hanging for season two.

It’s the Wes Anderson movie that exists within another movie that is spoofing Wes Anderson movies.

Yeah, I’m seeing from other replies that there’s a formula I would have known if I ever attended a statistic class and wasn’t just brute forcing a solution, and which would be applicable to larger values of n and a.

Wait. But that Kang was in the quantum realm. So 1/6 scale would be submicroscopic...

Reminds me that I need to go take a “liquidity event” before my next meeting.

I assume this “stock” has the same actual value and ability to be cashed out as the shares “owned” by the Packers fanbase.

I ran down a solution after posting mine, and not only does it agree, it has a little simulator to “prove” the solution. Which was very good for my self-confidence.

I know switching wins. I probably poorly explained my comparison of this to the Monty Hall problem. In that case, the answer isn’t the intuitive 50/50 chance that people initially leap to because one needs to factor in the host having fore-knowledge when opening the door (ie: he’ll never open the door with the car).

I’m just concerned because the write-up describes the problem as tricky and counter intuitive and my answer seems bother straight forwards and intuitive, so I’m convinced I did something wrong.

LAST WEEK: I love the u/n d/p symmetry because it’s why “DN” is used as an abbreviation for DOWN on elevators, because then you only needed to make buttons that read “up” and flip them over to read “dn”. Of course then there was a call to make the buttons accessible and brail was added, so this is no longer the case,

I am intrigued by this idea and wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

“Entertaining despite its flaws” describes all my favorite D&D campaigns.

One of the very few negative reviews right now on Rotten Tomatoes seems mostly upset that there’s a narrative about found family which...I feel is so central to D&D as typically played that not including that narrative would be a complete disservice to the source material.

Also good was more back story to Grogu ,maybe we will eventually find out why and how he ended up in the desert defended by all those guys Mando killed to retrieve him for the Empire Remnants.

Did Grogu have to compete on the game show? I need to know!

So you’re telling me there’s a chance.

I was about to say he’s had a career of doing the kinds of movies that Oscar doesn’t necessarily give acting awards to...then remembered that The Fugitive won TLJ an Oscar.