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Hey Flash. Just saw your messages to this and was curious to know if you also hire remote. Really interested. Email is at my profile. Thanks!


Just update my profile with the email info. Thanks!


Hey mate Li doesnt "officially" hire remotely. There have been very rare cases where existing folks left to go work remotely, but hiring this way has been very rare. I am happy to chat offline to see if there is anything we (our recruiters) can do?


And where did you get your "facts" from? Source?


These are not hidden facts. You can find them quite easily with simple queries...

http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/African-Americans-cite...

"African Americans in San Francisco are cited for resisting arrest at a rate eight times greater than whites even when serious crimes are not involved, according to statistics drawn from court records."

Here is also a good overall source (but the author has a label on him).

http://www.colorofcrime.com/2016/03/the-color-of-crime-2016-...


You can be arrested for resisting arrest, without being charged with any other crime. If the entire crux of this debate is a systemic racial bias on the part of law enforcement, it stands to reason that you shouldn't use statistics from law enforcement to argue against law enforcement's bias, doesn't it?


The report explains why the law enforcement statistics are trustworthy, and specifically why arrest rates (especially for violent crimes) are likely to be particularly accurate. The report itself is very thorough.


The statistics quoted above do not relate to this particular case. Overgeneralizing much?


I wasn't overgeneralizing anything. I was responding to "you shouldn't use statistics from law enforcement..."


Except if you dig deeper into those stats, you'll see that something like 5% of the same cops account for over 40% of "resisting arrest" charges, and 15% account for ~75% of those cases [1]. So most of it seems to come down to the police and how they approach making arrests.

[1] http://project.wnyc.org/resisting/


Does that take into account the type of police officer making the arrest (patrol, traffic, detective, narcotics, transit, desk/administrative, etc) and also the deployment and arrest location?

If the same cops patrol the same demographic and the same high crime areas it would reason that the same cops (and same type of specific category) will be making the majority of the arrests. Which will skew the mentioned statistic to them.


Now you're reaching. Read the accompanying story for more information. This is a widely recognizing problem.


Alton Sterling was obviously resisting arrest - that's a fact.


Where did you get your fictitious fact from? Where is your evidence? Just making things up as usual right?


It's on the video, Bro. Watch the video. Even the most liberal talking heads admit that he was resisting arrest, as you can see if you watch the video. BTW, if you watch the video, you will note that he is resisting arrest. It's a key factor that watching the video will show that he is resisting arrest. In conclusion, Alton Sterling was resisting arrest. So, don't forget, Alton Sterling was resisting arrest.


so cool. started learning german :)


Hi Izak. I am quite interested in the details of your last idea for a synchronous platform. If you don't mind, could you shed some light on what problem you trying to solve? Thanks.


Sorry to be rude, but not really. It turns out it is tangential to the rest of my comment and I should have edited it out :)


Nice effort. Do you find Python fast enough in solving the required task?


Do you have similar regression code in Matlab?


Quite surprised there has been no comment yet. Cool project.


Are you all forgeting the good deeds reported about in the article? Does that count for anything from an online community?


Churches are the biggest donators in the world. Does that count for anything for them?


Is that true?


Why is the common denominator to these problems Safari? Any thoughts?


Just an idea here - Safari 5 now pre-caches DNS requests for links on a page. Is it possible that Google is doing some DNS-fu to load balance across multiple data centers that causes strange issues like the infinite redirects because there is a delay between when the DNS request was cached and the user clicks on the link?


I see same issues with Chrome. Infinite redirect, slow gmail.


Obviously the argument about if Apple's growth is sustainable or not also hinges on something troublesome about its history: the presence or absence of Steve Jobs. Will you invest in a company that is so much personified in an individual who will definitely leave someday?


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