pipboyover9000

pipboyover9000 t1_jb1643l wrote

That’s one thing culturally that America does better than 99% of the rest of the world, sportsmanship in regard to visiting fans.

Granted it’s not the same everywhere, if you go to Philly, be expected to get shouted at. But if you’re going to a college football game in a midwestern state, I’ve seen home team fans buy drinks and recommend places to eat for visiting fans, regularly. Allowing other fans in the bars makes it more fun, like they are actually apart of a rivalry and that allows for banter

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pipboyover9000 t1_j2nzx3d wrote

Don’t worry mate, your “lesson” would have been filled with dogshit and I’m glad to have been spared that crap.

And I can tell you barely passed the high school level stats class that you snoozed through as well.

Engineers graph these processes exactly like this and I had no issue reading his work

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pipboyover9000 t1_j2nx2d6 wrote

Just so you are aware, graphs do not need to start at zero. There is no magic rule that states this need be the case for a graph to be useful.

You use relative axes all the time so that it is possible to see small variations in data that would be otherwise impossible if you scaled it so that the graph axes have zeros

The issue is that not having a zero correctly scaled can be misleading but with the data points being labeled in the first graph, only an idiot would assume that the bottom line is a zero

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pipboyover9000 t1_j2nuvru wrote

Control limits are set by the organization running the process and are only used as an indicator to an engineer that a process is out of the desired control. Using control limit methods is irrelevant here as any limit average is assumed to not change over time which is clearly incorrect and the data would need to be normalized first.

The calculations that you speak of are very weak when you only take one sample at a time, which is why you see guys on the floor pull off like 3-5 at a time and average them.

Did you just take a manufacturing class or something?

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pipboyover9000 t1_j2nt9n0 wrote

In all seriousness, there is no logical connection between the second burrito being weighed as the highest and your hypothesis

There is outlier data that matches the initially high data points in the latter half of the set, that if normalized by a moving average would be identical in value

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pipboyover9000 t1_j2mlz75 wrote

Started as a deans list student only to slowly fail out due to mental illness before I could get my engineering degree. I fought it hard in the trenches for a couple of years, somehow found the strength to fight back.

Came back and am now a deans list student 3 semesters running, got my gpa back to a 3.0 and I graduate next December. I’m really ashamed of it but I’m also really proud of myself for not staying down after getting knocked in the head.

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