4:11
Probability and Statistics
Learn about Probability and Statistics, a brief introduction at mathebook.net...
published: 14 Oct 2008
Author: calculatorbox
Probability and Statistics
Learn about Probability and Statistics, a brief introduction at mathebook.net
13:07
Algebra II: Probability and Statistics
Learn more: www.khanacademy.org 76-79, probability, mean, standard deviation...
published: 24 Dec 2008
Author: khanacademy
Algebra II: Probability and Statistics
Learn more: www.khanacademy.org 76-79, probability, mean, standard deviation
4:23
Mathematica 8: Probability and Statistics
Building on two decades of development in symbolic and numeric algorithms, Mathematica 8 p...
published: 19 Nov 2010
Author: WolframResearch
Mathematica 8: Probability and Statistics
Building on two decades of development in symbolic and numeric algorithms, Mathematica 8 provides a suite of high-level functions for probability and statistics. New capabilities include the ability to compute the probability of any event or the expectation of any expression, simulate any distribution, and automatically estimate parameters or test goodness of fit for distributions. To support distributional modeling and analysis, Mathematica 8 offers the largest collection of probability distributions, as well as full support for several dozens of properties, including distribution functions, moments, quantiles, and generating functions. Mathematica 8 provides an unprecedented level of support for parametric distributions. By systematically adding distributions in common use from a wide variety of disciplines such as finance, actuarial science, communication, life science, statistics, etc., Mathematica now provides a complete parametric modeling and analysis framework. Mathematica 8 brings a high level of algorithm automation and computational aesthetics to statistical visualization. Histograms—binned or smoothed—show the shapes of distributions. Quantile and probability plots compare data to a reference distribution. Box-and-whisker and distribution charts compare the distribution shapes for several datasets. For more information about Mathematica 8, please visit: www.wolfram.com
68:18
Statistics 21 - Lecture 1
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business...
published: 20 Jan 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 21 - Lecture 1
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business
49:03
Statistics 20 - Lecture 1
Introduction to Probability and Statistics...
published: 27 Aug 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 20 - Lecture 1
Introduction to Probability and Statistics
10:34
Introduction to Probability and Statistics (HD)
Introduction to Probability and Statistics www.techednet.com...
published: 04 Jul 2010
Author: MrTechednet
Introduction to Probability and Statistics (HD)
Introduction to Probability and Statistics www.techednet.com
35:10
Probability & Statistics in Finance
Mathematica 8 provides a suite of high-level functions for probability and statistics. New...
published: 25 Mar 2011
Author: WolframResearch
Probability & Statistics in Finance
Mathematica 8 provides a suite of high-level functions for probability and statistics. New capabilities include the ability to compute the probability of any event or the expectation of any expression, simulate any distribution, and automatically estimate parameters or test goodness of fit for distributions. Oleksandr Pavlyk, one of the developers who worked on the new and enhanced probability and statistics functionality in Mathematica 8, gave an overview of some of the new features at the Wolfram Technology Conference 2010. In this video, he highlights how Mathematica's probability and statistics functions can be used in finance. For more information about Mathematica, please visit: www.wolfram.com
7:54
Problem Solving Probability and Statistics Section 6 1 Part 1
Define a population and a sample. Distinguish between statistical inference and probabilit...
published: 21 Mar 2009
Author: bigdprof
Problem Solving Probability and Statistics Section 6 1 Part 1
Define a population and a sample. Distinguish between statistical inference and probability. Define a probability experiment. Determine if the order is important in a sample. Determine if events can happen at the same time. Determine if the outcome of one event influences another.
7:21
Problem Solving Probability and Statistics Section 6 1 Part 3
Define a population and a sample. Distinguish between statistical inference and probabilit...
published: 21 Mar 2009
Author: bigdprof
Problem Solving Probability and Statistics Section 6 1 Part 3
Define a population and a sample. Distinguish between statistical inference and probability. Define a probability experiment. Determine if the order is important in a sample. Determine if events can happen at the same time. Determine if the outcome of one event influences another.
5:35
Probability and Statistics: The Birthday Problem
Mr. Mike (www.radicaltutor.com) discusses the chance that two students in a classroom have...
published: 30 Jun 2010
Author: radicaltutor
Probability and Statistics: The Birthday Problem
Mr. Mike (www.radicaltutor.com) discusses the chance that two students in a classroom have the same birthday.
10:34
Probability and Statistics
Introduction to Probability and Statistics...
published: 16 Jan 2009
Author: ddd5119
Probability and Statistics
Introduction to Probability and Statistics
51:24
Statistics 20 - Lecture 2
Introduction to Probability and Statistics...
published: 30 Aug 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 20 - Lecture 2
Introduction to Probability and Statistics
50:02
Statistics 20 - Lecture 7: Several minutes of visuals are mi
Introduction to Probability and Statistics...
published: 10 Sep 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 20 - Lecture 7: Several minutes of visuals are mi
Introduction to Probability and Statistics
77:24
Statistics 21 - Lecture 8
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business...
published: 12 Feb 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 21 - Lecture 8
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business
Vimeo results:
2:32
Мишка Holiday 2011 Lookbook [Teaser Video]
What do the Holidays mean to you? Perhaps you think of Yuletide carols and the joy of buil...
published: 05 Nov 2011
Author: Мишка Bloglin
Мишка Holiday 2011 Lookbook [Teaser Video]
What do the Holidays mean to you? Perhaps you think of Yuletide carols and the joy of building a snowman. Maybe for some it brings to mind memories of ignoring your bizarre uncle while seated around a table full of slow cooked meats and hearty root vegetables. Statistically speaking, for many of you it unfortunately means moping around in your underwear and compulsively watching A Christmas Story alone. But for us, it means one thing: gifts!
So, as usual, like some fucked up skeletal Santa Claus we're almost ready to bequeath to you a bounty you will not soon forget. I am of course talking about our brand spankin' new Holiday 2011 Collection! In a tantalizing, advent calendar type maneuver, here's a little sneak peek to tide you over. But this isn't just some bullshit chalky piece of chocolate shaped like a reindeer. It's a stylish video featuring some of your favorite artists wearing our fresh wares shot by Nick Genova.
You may notice the video's beautiful locale. You know how people call Canada "America's Hat?" Well, as you probably know, we fucking love hats! So this year we trucked on up to say yo to our neighbors from the north and hang with some of Toronto's premier musicians. We've got longtime mopster Damian "Pink Eyes" Abraham from Fucked Up, House revivalists Azari & III, Witch Houser High Park, new Jokers of the Scene project Blank Capsule and dubstep dons Zed's Dead all rocking our figurative chain.
Lemme tell you, this collection is the freshest collection since our last fresh collection. Winter scarves, Death Adder beanies, varsity hoodies, a bevy of flannels, cardigans, toggle coats, and a fucking KRANG Bear Mop shirt. So peep the video, take note of your favorite pieces, and get ready to run over to 350 Broadway, Echo Park, or our Online Store in mid November to snatch them up so you can impress your family members, or freak them out depending on their age and comfortability with the underworld. Merry Festivus for all!
Damian Abraham | twitter.com/#!/leftfordamian
Zeds Dead | www.facebook.com/whoszed
Jokers of the Scene/Blank Capsule | soundcloud.com/jokers-of-the-scene / soundcloud.com/blank-capsule
High Park | www.highpark.tumblr.com
Azari & III | www.azariandiii.com
Music
"Kill Me" by Blank Capsule
"4Ever" by High Park
Video by Nick Genova [vimeo.com/user2627973]
Produced by Michael Cohn [gangsterrave.com]
www.mishkanyc.com
0:28
Mind Lamp: Mind-Matter Interaction Technology
www.mind-lamp.com
-Introduction-
A lot is happening inside the Mind Lamp™. What seems to ...
published: 13 Feb 2009
Author: Psyleron
Mind Lamp: Mind-Matter Interaction Technology
www.mind-lamp.com
-Introduction-
A lot is happening inside the Mind Lamp™. What seems to be a simple color-changing process is actually the result of complicated circuitry that measures probabilities derived from electron tunneling, a curious but well-known feature of the quantum realm.
In electron tunneling, electrons encounter a potential energy barrier. Depending on their wave-function, they have a certain probability of staying on one side of the barrier, or suddenly appearing ("tunneling") on the other side. At the heart of the Mind Lamp™ is a device called a random event generator (REG) that converts electron tunneling phenomena into a digital output.
According to quantum theory, the digital outputs of the REG are intrinsically random. A microprocessor inside the Mind Lamp™ monitors the the statistical characteristics of the REG's output, looking for probabilistic patterns happening within the random data. The probabilities measured are used to adjust the red, green, blue, and white color balances of a set of special high-power LEDs.
The result is a rich and fascinating color display, as the Mind Lamp™ moves between deep hues of white, red, orange, yellow, green, cyan, blue, purple, and magenta. A switch inside the lamp toggles between two operational modes: white-to-color mode, in which the lamp stays white until a probabilistic pattern moves it toward another color, and rainbow mode, in which the lamp does cycles between the nine colors, moving from one to the other when a probabilistic pattern is detected.
This means that the behavior of the lamp is not predetermined, or even fundamentally predictable. The behavior of the lamp is ultimately driven by probability measurements derived from the nanoscopic realm, where the rules can be very different.
-Mental Influence?-
Perhaps the most interesting feature of the Mind Lamp™, is that several research bodies have found significant evidence that the human mind can have an organizing effect on random systems. In other words, evidence suggests that the Mind Lamp™ can be influenced by consciousness - our subjective thoughts, moods, and intention.
At the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research laboratory at Princeton University, for example, scientists gathered enormous amounts of evidence suggesting that our minds can have an unexplained yet statistically significant organizing effect on the output of random event generators. (www.princeton.edu/~pear)
Most users report a curious connection between their intention and the color behavior of the lamp. Can you influence the Mind Lamp™ by thought alone? Read the research and try it for yourself.
www.mind-lamp.com
49:55
The Importance of Our Church Covenant
A mere two months after the Los Angeles Dodgers inked a new, two–year, $45 million guarant...
published: 08 Sep 2009
Author: Jim Tompkins
The Importance of Our Church Covenant
A mere two months after the Los Angeles Dodgers inked a new, two–year, $45 million guaranteed deal with power hitter Manny Ramirez, the slugger got hit with a 50–game suspension for using a banned performance–enhancing substance. The reason, a “Behavior” clause written into his contract. The 50 game suspension will save the Dodgers 8 million dollars.
Earlier this year Kellogg’s backed out of an endorsement deal with Michael Phelps because of a “Behavior Clause” they had written into the contract. You know them as “Morality Clauses”, but because of changing morals, they have become specific “behavior” clauses.
There was once a time when an advertiser could get an agent to agree to the following clause: “If [Celebrity] has committed any act that offends the community or any segment thereof and/or public morals and decency, such behavior shall be considered a material breach of this Agreement incapable of cure, and if in [Advertiser’s] sole judgment such breach is likely to cause a diminution in the value of the [Advertiser’s] commercial association with [Celebrity], then [Advertiser] shall have the right, in addition to any other rights [Advertiser] may have as a result of such breach, to immediately terminate this Agreement on written notice to [Celebrity]. In such event, there shall be no further compensation payable to [Celebrity] and such termination shall not limit or effect any other rights [Advertiser] may have against [Celebrity] under this Agreement on account of such termination.”
However, society’s views of morality have changed, so contracts have gotten to be very specific as regards the “behavior” of the celebrities. With Michael Phelps, public drug use was clearly prohibited.
These behavior clauses have even entered the world o Big Banks. The latest banking crisis underscored the importance of not appearing greedy in the face of massive government bailouts at taxpayer expense. The government refused to give “Bailout Funds” unless certain behavior standards were met. Corporate executives lost their jobs and had their pay cut because of lavish extravaganza’s and exorbitant bonuses while Americans saw Billions of dollars in savings wiped out.
In the sports world, in the corporate world, in the banking world, how we behave and act is very important, so important that people lose millions when they fail to live up to certain standards.
Even in the church, our behavior is important. George Barna has become well-known because of the extensive research and surveys he conducts. He has noticed some alarming trends in the church, particularly in regards to our “Biblical World view”. A Survey published in March of this year produced these results:
For the purposes of the survey, a “biblical worldview” was defined as believing that absolute moral truth exists; the Bible is totally accurate in all of the principles it teaches; Satan is considered to be a real being or force, not merely symbolic; a person cannot earn their way into Heaven by trying to be good or do good works; Jesus Christ lived a sinless life on earth; and God is the all-knowing, all-powerful creator of the world who still rules the universe today. In the research, anyone who held all of those beliefs was said to have a biblical worldview.
The same questions were asked of respondents in national surveys by Barna in 1995, 2000 and 2005. The results indicate that the percentage of adults with a biblical worldview, as defined above, has remained unchanged for more than a decade. The numbers show that 7% had such a worldview in 1995, compared to 10% in 2000, 11% in 2005, and 9% now. Even among born again adults, the statistics have remained flat: 18% in 1995, 22% in 2000, 21% in 2005, and 19% today.
Varying numbers of Americans embrace the different aspects of biblical worldview thinking. The survey found that:
* One-third of all adults (34%) believe that moral truth is absolute and unaffected by the circumstances. Slightly less than half of the born again adults (46%) believe in absolute moral truth.
* Half of all adults firmly believe that the Bible is accurate in all the principles it teaches. That proportion includes the four-fifths of born again adults (79%) who concur.
* Just one-quarter of adults (27%) are convinced that Satan is a real force. Even a minority of born again adults (40%) adopt that perspective.
* Similarly, only one-quarter of adults (28%) believe that it is impossible for someone to earn their way into Heaven through good behavior. Not quite half of all born again Christians (47%) strongly reject the notion of earning salvation through their deeds.
* A minority of American adults (40%) are persuaded that Jesus Christ lived a sinless life while He was on earth. Slightly less than two-thirds of the born again segment (62%) strongly believes that He was sinless.
* Seven out of ten adults (70%) say that God is the all-powerful, all-knowing creator of
60:47
An Interview with Mary Wilson of the Supremes
Mary: I gotta change shoes.
Mary: Okay, there we go. Now, that’s so much better.
Stuart:...
published: 08 Nov 2010
Author: Victoria and Albert Museum
An Interview with Mary Wilson of the Supremes
Mary: I gotta change shoes.
Mary: Okay, there we go. Now, that’s so much better.
Stuart: Ladies and gentlemen, obviously, let’s begin at the beginning. Normally, the protocol is that we give people a round of applause at the end of the event. In this particular case, we’re going to break with all the protocols, because I know a lot of people that are in the audience, I’ve seen faces, I’ve seen people with reputations in the audience, and I think that all of us can say, unanimously that, Mary probably doesn’t really deeply understand how much impact her singing and her reputation has had in our lives, the way it’s shaped the love that we’ve got for the music. So, ladies and gentlemen, Mary Wilson of The Supremes, come on.
[applause]
Stuart: So, where to start? Let’s start with a quick question. Mary, I wanted to -
Mary: Well, I need to explain something.
Stuart: Yes, my dear.
Mary: Okay, before we go any further. I’m not the founding - the only founding member of The Supremes, as most of you know. Florence, Diane and Betty McGlown, are the founding members of The Supremes, and I cannot take that credit all myself. So, the people here in the audience understand and know that, so, let’s make that very clear.
Stuart: Well, let’s start with the first question, I was watching you last night in the opening of the exhibition, singing, and sung a couple of songs for us, it was great, and one of the things that struck me is, actually, without any hesitation, I’d forgotten how great a solo singer you are, how great a singer you are. And I wonder if that actually, when we go back to The Supremes, there’s been criticisms in the past, for example, that Diana was actually the least good singer of The Supremes, she had a very specific voice. And I just wanted to get your thoughts about - just describe the different voices that were in The Supremes.
Mary: Well, I don’t think that you can - anyone said that Diane was the least good singer in The Supremes, that’s not true, and I’ve never ever said anything like that. My point was always to sort of bring forward the fact that Florence Ballard was a great singer, and I was also a good singer. So, I think people - and sometimes when we tried to explain or say things like that, people think that you’re saying that the other person is not that good. That was not my point, at all. My point was saying that Florence Ballad was a Gospel, strong singer, Diane was a pop singer and I was kind of, like, the ballad singer, so, we each had our own, you know, good points.
Stuart: And at a time, and in a city, which probably, without any hesitation, you could say was probably, at its time, the greatest musical city in the world, bar none. I mean, if you actually compare and contrast it with the other great regional city of the time, Liverpool, many of the Liverpool acts moved down to London and whatever, but there you were, in Detroit, touring the world, phenomenal place. Just to get some grasp on this, simply your high school alone, who did you go to school with?
Mary: Well, in Detroit, we all kind of grew up in the projects. Detroit was really a small - is, a small town. And Smokey Robinson, I guess, was in the same - lived in the neighbourhood as Diana Ross. I went to high school with some of The Miracles, which was Bobby Rogers. The person that did a lot of singing - or writing, with Smokey Robinson, was Al Gutierrez, Marvin Tarplin, and he and I went to high school together. Florence went to the same high school as some of The Temptations. So, we all came from pretty much the same neighbourhood, even though it was kind of large.
Stuart: And when did you first remember the sense that Mary Wilson had the desire to be a singer? Where did the desire come from?
Mary: Well, you know, people like Little Richard, you know, there was Jackie Wilson, there was Frankie Lyman and The Teenagers was one of my favourite ...
Stuart: He was a bad boy, though, wasn’t he?
Mary: He was a what?
Stuart: He was a bad boy.
Mary: I don’t know, I was too young.
Stuart: No, he was a very bad boy, Mary.
Mary: Well, you know, doctors don’t tell secrets on other doctors. But, we all kind of bad later on. But, yeah, you know, from just - oops, we don’t want to go there right now - but, anyway, when I was born, my mother said that when the doctors spanked me, I started singing. So, I mean, I did that, but I never ever thought that it was different, I thought that everybody woke up in the morning singing. You know, I thought that everyone did that. I didn’t realise, until I became one of the members of The Primettes, that that was something very special. Then I realised that that talent was special, but, prior to that, I would just, you know, woke up and start singing, " ooooooo," you know, whatever, and just ...
Stuart: And say a little bit about that photograph, because it connects you back to, like, many Detroit people of your generation, to the Souther
Youtube results:
76:56
Statistics 21 - Lecture 7
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business...
published: 10 Feb 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 21 - Lecture 7
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business
80:57
Statistics 21 - Lecture 9
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business...
published: 17 Feb 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 21 - Lecture 9
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business
76:45
Statistics 21 - Lecture 23
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business...
published: 16 Apr 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 21 - Lecture 23
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business
79:07
Statistics 21 - Lecture 10
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business...
published: 19 Feb 2010
Author: UCBerkeley
Statistics 21 - Lecture 10
Introductory Probability and Statistics for Business