Почему в видеоиграх такие тупые мини-игры?
Во многих видеоиграх есть мини-задачки, которые моделируют какое-то якобы сложное действие. Например, вскрытие замков, взлом компьютера, какие-нибудь типа научные исследования в сюжете. И я не помню, видел ли хоть раз в жизни не тупую мини-игру. В лучшем случае у вас будет что-то типа головоломки "Трубопровод". В худшем — задачка уровня цветной пирамидки для младенцев.
Почему так? Нельзя сказать, что все видеоигры спроектированы для глупых или для детей. Иногда в основном сюжете или механике игры есть элементы, которые требуют уметь хотя бы чуть-чуть шевелить мозгами. Но почему нигде не делают интересные мини-игры, которые было бы сложно решать? Ведь образцов для этого дофига: начиная с какого-нибудь "Сапёра" и заканчивая Wordle.
А там блин везде соедини точки, да подвинь квадратики. Кажется, попытка сделать интересную мини-игру была в Cyberpunk в системе взлома, но не удалась — хорошая идея реализовывалась авторами, которые плохо понимают, как работают игры и вообще интерактивные системы, в итоге для хоть какой-нибудь решаемости сделали сами наборы данных супер примитивными.
Знаете ли вы примеры игр с интересными мини-задачками, если только вся игра не построена на них (как например The Witness, хотя там больше половины задачек очень скучные)?
#games
Французский автопром не теряет надежды на успех. Renault в ближайшие годы обещает показать 22 новые модели, для Европы и Латинской Америки - и там и там маленькие гибриды.
Премиальное подразделение Citroen - DS идет другим путем и собирается конкурировать с BMW и MB с помощью нового DS No8. Это электромобиль весом 2,2 тонны, мощностью 241-375 лс и разгоном за 5,4 - 7,8 секунд.
Немцы делают ставку на мощность и инженерные решения, китайцы на электронику. Французы на дизайн. Значит считают DS No8 красивым.
И правда красивый - 👍
Скорее нет - 👎
#ds
#ds
Deepnote supports Great Expectations (GE) now.
I ran their template notebook:
https://deepnote.com/project/Reduce-Pipeline-Debt-With-Great-Expectations-mLT9DFCQSpW4kUBAzzdhBw/%2Fnotebook.ipynb/#00000-e170fae0-7e06-4a7a-85f3-343584ec4b94
#DS
Just in case you are also struggling with Python packages on Apple M1 Macs
I am using the third option: anaconda + miniforge.
https://www.anaconda.com/blog/apple-silicon-transition
#DS
Hullman J, Gelman A. Designing for interactive exploratory data analysis requires theories of graphical inference. Harvard Data Science Review. 2021. doi:10.1162/99608f92.3ab8a587
https://hdsr.mitpress.mit.edu/pub/w075glo6/release/2
Creating visualizations seems to be a creative task. At least for entry-level visualization tasks, we follow our hearts and build whatever is needed. However, visualizations are made for different purposes. Some visualizations are simply explorations and for us to get some feelings on the data. Some others are built for the validation of hypotheses. These are very different things.
Confirmation of an idea using charts is usually hard. In most cases, we need statistical tests to (dis)prove a hypothesis instead of just looking at the charts. Thus, visualizations become a tool to help us formulate a good question.
However, not everyone is using charts as hints only. Instead, many use charts to conclude. As a result, even experienced analysts draw spurious conclusions. These so-called insights are not going to be too solid.
The visual analysis seems to be an adversarial game between humans and the visualizations. There are many different models for this process. A crude and probably stupid model can be illustrated through an example of analysis by the histogram of a variable.
The histogram looks like a bell. It is symmetric. It is centered at 10 with an FWHM of 2.6. I guess this is a Gaussian distribution with a mean 10 and sigma 1. This is the posterior p(model | chart).
Imagine a curve like what was just guessed on top of the original curve. Would my guess and the actual curve overlap with each other?
If not, what do we have to adjust? Do we need to introduce another parameter?
Guess the parameter of the new distribution model and compare it with the actual curve again.
The above process is very similar to a repetitive Bayesian inference. Though, the actual analysis may be much more complicated as the analysts would carrier a lot of prior knowledge about the generating process of the data.
Through this example, we see that integrating explorations with preliminary model building as Confirmatory Data Analysis may bring in more confidence in drawing insights from charts.
On the other hand, including complicated statistical models leads to misinterpretations since not everyone is familiar with statistical hypothesis testing. So the complexity has to be balanced.
#DS
This is an interesting report by anaconda. We can kind of confirm from this that Python is still the king of languages for data science. SQL is right following Python.
Quote from the report:
> Between March 2020 to February 2021, the pandemic economic period, we saw 4.6 billion package downloads, a 48% increase from the previous year.
We have no data for other languages so no predictions can be made but it is interesting to see Python growing so fast.
The roadblocks different data professionals facing are quite different. If the professional is a cloud engineer or mlops, then they do not mention that skills gap in the organization that many times. But for data scientists/analysts, skills gaps (e.g., data engineering, docker, k8s) is mentioned a lot. This might be related to the cases when the organization doesn't even have cloud engineers/ops or mlops.
See the next message for the PDF file.
https://www.anaconda.com/state-of-data-science-2021
#DS
This paper serves as a good introduction to the declarative data analytics tools.
Declarative analytics performs data analysis using a declarative syntax instead of functions for specific algorithms. Using declarative syntax, one can “describe what you want the program to achieve rather than how to achieve it”.
To be declarative, the declarative language has to be specific on the tasks. With this, we can only turn the knobs of some predefined model. To me, this is a deal-breaker.
Anyways, this paper is still a good read.
Makrynioti N, Vassalos V. Declarative Data Analytics: A Survey. IEEE Trans Knowl Data Eng. 2021;33: 2392–2411. doi:10.1109/TKDE.2019.2958084
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TKDE.2019.2958084
#DS
https://octo.github.com/projects/flat-data
Hmmm, so they gave it a name.
I've built so many projects using this approach. I started building such data repos using CI/CD services way before github actions was born. Of course github actions made it much easier.
One of them is the EU covid data tracking project ( https://github.com/covid19-eu-zh/covid19-eu-data ). It's been running for more than a year with very little maintenance. Some covid projects even copied our EU covid data tracking setup.
I actually built a system (https://dataherb.github.io) to pull such github actions based data scraping repos together.