6 upvotes, 3 downvotes and 0 comments on my meta answer. This pisses me off because we will literally never get anywhere on this if people don't respnd to things
@DJMcMayhem Looks like @quartata basically answered all of your questions (which I appreciate). Regarding parsing the transcript, I only used Django for its easy-to-use database management tool, but it's unnecessary for that purpose. I used a different Python library for running queries.
@TuxCopter Yeah, speaking of which, I'm starting to get aggravated by how you use your sock so often, especially because you basically never do so constructively.
@El'endiaStarman CMC: Can you find a bound on the number of positive roots of a real polynomial, just by looking at the signs of it's coefficients? (I bet you can :) I actually found a theorem recently about this, but unfortunately I forgot it's name.
@TuxCopter It was the same thing +1 in Turkey, the latitude that determined UTC+2 is (kinda) on Istanbul (biggest city, in western Turkey), but now we use UTC+3, which almost isn't in Turkey.
> As of 2011, all member states of the European Union observe summer time; those that use CET during the winter use Central European Summer Time (CEST) (or: UTC+02:00, daylight saving time) in summer (from last Sunday of March to last Sunday of October). The exceptions to this are only to Algeria and Tunisia, which use Central European Time all year round.
We should just all switch to UTC. Who says 08:00 has to be "in the morning". A single degree is already a huge timeshift, so timezones are inaccurate anyway.
You know what, write a few pages of illegible gibberish but with mathematical symbols here and there, and as a title write "secret proof of riemann the hypothesis"
@TuxCopter basically a python helper script will be spawned and whenever someone wants to do something, we simply send that to the script and it returns result
That isn't how the internet works. And it would basically be the same as doing it locally with a socket but even slower. Like probably a second for one call
And the server would probably go down and piss everyone off
@PhiNotPi The characterization that the function should be a polynomial that maps (0,1) to itself seems very neat already. The problem, as I see it, is to determine the coin-flipping degree of any such function; or to find the maximum coin-flipping degree over all complying polynomials of a given degree