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Actually not true. If the website gets a million unique visitors, there is about a 60% chance of someone winning.


And why is this even called Infer? It's not doing inference...

BTW, Infer.NET is written in C#, but there is an F# wrapper.


Cheers, my bad.


I'm a computer scientist, and I call the (very old) study of graphs "graph theory". How is "network theory" different?

And is it just me, or is it painful to read this? It has the feel of a student taking an intro course on optimization, then exclaiming, "everything is an optimization problem!" I mean, sure, this is true, but it's tautological and feels forced to me.

And sorry, but Twitter's main innovation was discarding symmetry? People have been subscribing (an asymmetric relation) to things on the internet and otherwise for ages.


> Twitter's main innovation was discarding symmetry?

This is a common statement that benefits from explicit context: Twitter's innovation specifically was importing the "asymmetric follow" into a social network, a graph in which nodes represent individual people and in which relations are generally public.


I agree. It was about building the structure of a social network around the "asymmetric follow," and doing it in a way that facilitated the curated transitivity that Chris talks about.


What was the social network with public relations between people that failed because the "follow" was symmetric?


Symmetric follow doesn't have to fail for asymmetric follow to succeed. Twitter's innovation allowed them to create and serve new use-cases. That's all


My experience is that mathematicians and computer scientists use "graph," and engineers use "network." I specifically took a course in an engineering faculty called "network theory."


...(an asymmetric relation) to things on the internet

You mean a link? ;)

With regards to your other points, I do think the general premise of the post is correct that the pendulum is swinging back (?) towards more flexible data structures (e.g. graphs).

The writing does come across as though the author just had an epiphany ... hey... these things are all graphs...

Yeah, and so are lots of other things.


Social Graph is (or graphs in general are) the buzzword of the day, or perhaps year. It's not surprising that everything is being phrased in terms of it.


I down voted you by accident! My bad.

Yes, it was painful to read and I missed the whole point of the post unless it is just listing of where we find and use "graphs." I think this is a post out of his comfirt zone; I like his VC and startup posts better.


'Graph' is the next hottest buzzword on the internet, thanks to Facebook.


The data there has the scores from ~5000 games played over the course of each season, and the model he links to also seems quite reasonable to me: http://blog.smellthedata.com/2009/03/data-driven-march-madne...

Don't think of it as two data points. Think of it as two data sets.


And from a fellow researcher: http://hunch.net/?p=1172


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