← Back to context Comment by gtsnexp 10 hours ago Is the appeal of this tool its ability to identify semantic similarity? 3 comments gtsnexp Reply A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 8 hours ago The use case could vary from person to person. When you think about it, hacker news has large enough data set ( and one that is widely accessible ) to allow all sorts of fun analyses. In a sense, the appeal is:who knows what kind of fun patterns could emerge noduerme 6 hours ago The problem with HN isn't that the patterns are hard to discern, it's that no one wants to acknowledge them. A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 4 hours ago Oh? With few exceptions, I found people more willing to agree to an argument than anywhere else. Anything in particular you can share?
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 8 hours ago The use case could vary from person to person. When you think about it, hacker news has large enough data set ( and one that is widely accessible ) to allow all sorts of fun analyses. In a sense, the appeal is:who knows what kind of fun patterns could emerge noduerme 6 hours ago The problem with HN isn't that the patterns are hard to discern, it's that no one wants to acknowledge them. A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 4 hours ago Oh? With few exceptions, I found people more willing to agree to an argument than anywhere else. Anything in particular you can share?
noduerme 6 hours ago The problem with HN isn't that the patterns are hard to discern, it's that no one wants to acknowledge them. A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 4 hours ago Oh? With few exceptions, I found people more willing to agree to an argument than anywhere else. Anything in particular you can share?
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 4 hours ago Oh? With few exceptions, I found people more willing to agree to an argument than anywhere else. Anything in particular you can share?
The use case could vary from person to person. When you think about it, hacker news has large enough data set ( and one that is widely accessible ) to allow all sorts of fun analyses. In a sense, the appeal is:
who knows what kind of fun patterns could emerge
The problem with HN isn't that the patterns are hard to discern, it's that no one wants to acknowledge them.
Oh? With few exceptions, I found people more willing to agree to an argument than anywhere else. Anything in particular you can share?