The race came and I did all those things – hands, breathing, straight line, no dragging, start early. I forgot, however, to run. I blew a huge lead by running in perfect form, but in slow motion.
What's the lesson here?
Statistical education, publishing, sports analytics, and game theory - everything that makes math useful in real life. Now carbon negative!
If you are looking for my textbook Writing for Statistics and Data Science here it is for free in the Open Educational Resource Commons. Wri...
The race came and I did all those things – hands, breathing, straight line, no dragging, start early. I forgot, however, to run. I blew a huge lead by running in perfect form, but in slow motion.
What's the lesson here?
This is one of the 'lost chapters' of the textbook "Writing for Statistics and Data Science", which was removed because information changes too quickly. This chapter covers data science resumes, describing class projects to businesses, and writing letters of introduction to potential grad supervisors.
If you are looking for my textbook
here it is for free in the Open Educational Resource Commons.
Writing for Statistics and Data Science is given out under the Creative Commons 3.0 - Attribution license. That means you and anyone else has the right to copy it, change it, even sell your version of it, as long as credit for the original continues to be attributed to me. In short, it's open source, have fun.
There were a few chapters that I didn't include because they were either too niche or too prone to becoming obsolete. I'll be posting them here on the blog, with links being added in this post as those chapters go up. Details after the break.
There are two reasons why I read Review of The Theory of Gambling and Statistical Logic, Second Edition (2009), by Richard A. Epstein, which dictated which of the text's 440 pages I paid attention to and which I skimmed.
First, to learn more of the fundamentals of betting strategy for my current job at Sportlogiq. Second, to get material to include in a possible future Statistics and Gambling course.
The sports card industry (specifically baseball cards) crashed in 1994. Fantasy sports existed as early as the 60's, but really caught public attention around 1995. That timing is not coincident.
In both hobbies, fans get to have surrogate ownership of players, and the market value of those surrogates goes up or down with the performance of those players. At the casual level, being in a fantasy league is just a more publicly acceptable way to collect and play with cards. At the serious level, fantasy is a more viable, faster way to make a profit with your expertise than cards were.
In short, fantasy is just trading cards for grown ups.
But what if physical cards let you draft players?
In this article I’ve organized many of the parallels and contrasts between hockey and soccer so that you can watch a few games and of either one and confidently say that "hockey is just like soccer except X instead of Y".