MidnightPale3220
MidnightPale3220 t1_j83vmph wrote
Reply to comment by 6548996 in Claimed (by Ukraine) casualties inflicted correlate strongly with verified officer deaths (offset of 1 week) by Tamer_
I agree about presentation, but as regards obviousness of correlation, in war, it is a tendency for sides involved to inflate other side's losses.
So a correlation between what Ukrainian officials say, and some other independent source is actually a good sign of trustworthiness of that conflict side's data, which is not necessarily true for a country in war.
MidnightPale3220 t1_j1sfif8 wrote
Reply to comment by justlikeofficespace in [OC] Annual Finances of a Millennial Saving Up for a House (made with SankeyMATIC) by justlikeofficespace
Impressive indeed. For the record, Uncle Sam is pretty lenient with his taxes. For a first world country to get more than 50% of your salary in net income seems luxurious to many Europeans.
Then again, we don't generally need to save as much for medical bills, if I understand correctly.
MidnightPale3220 t1_j1s88ul wrote
Reply to comment by SpaceX96 in [OC] glassdoor.com data science salaries by skill requirements. by SpaceX96
Well, CLI is more like basic knowledge. If you know how to point and click, you know GUI. If you know how to enter, edit, move between and possibly chain commands using text entry, you know CLI.
But you don't really know how to work any actual program without learning is switches and manual.
You could argue that CLI is a skill, but nobody generally puts ability to read and write in their native language on their CVs, sorta. Rather. CLI is a basic prerequisite. IMO. at least.
MidnightPale3220 t1_j0ozz5j wrote
Reply to comment by Agora2020 in Cerebrovascular insulin receptors are defective in Alzheimer’s disease by BlitzOrion
Yes, but isn't it a different pathway?
MidnightPale3220 t1_j067nyf wrote
Reply to comment by never_rains in [OC] World collective security arrangements for the United States, China, and Russia, with each's share of world GDP. by MST3KTFCCTRT
True, but this doesn't invalidate my point that it is not necessarily very meaningful to just compare security alliances.
Can we talk about CSTO even being a security bloc if its members are fighting each other unchecked?
MidnightPale3220 t1_j05xzhi wrote
Reply to [OC] World collective security arrangements for the United States, China, and Russia, with each's share of world GDP. by MST3KTFCCTRT
Also not all defence alliances are equal.
For example, currently there is a military conflict between Armenia (member of CSTO) and Azerbaijan, as well as between Kyrgyzstan (member of CSTO) and Tajikistan (observer status in CSTO). Russia as main "security provider" within CSTO doesn't appear to provide any meaningful security for its members in these cases.
MidnightPale3220 t1_ivuuj95 wrote
Reply to comment by pato_aceves in Average Age of ATP No. 1 Rank Since 1975 [OC] by pato_aceves
wtf is ATP?
MidnightPale3220 t1_issneps wrote
Reply to [OC] Fertilizers increase crop productivity by half and becomes a key product as global food costs reach new highs. by RobinWheeliams
Conflict started in February, btw
MidnightPale3220 t1_isifoqi wrote
Reply to comment by byJoanic in [OC] Most popular unisex names (US + UK + Canada + Australia) by byJoanic
Tbh as a European I wasn't aware of most of these names being unisex.
MidnightPale3220 t1_j840x9w wrote
Reply to comment by 6548996 in Claimed (by Ukraine) casualties inflicted correlate strongly with verified officer deaths (offset of 1 week) by Tamer_
Unfortunately it is not as simple as that. Russia has trouble with replacement officer count, especially since it drafted a huge number of conscripts in a very short time, for which they have mostly provided minimal training. To me the increase in ratio actually corresponds to what I would expect when reading about situation on front lines.