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" ... JL: Yes, exactly. The problem is when those subsets form a stronger identity with themselves than with the larger organization, which is exactly what I think is happening with the American experience right now. During World War II, there was an American identity rooted in the “Us versus Them” mentality of war. Similarly, during the American Revolution, there was a sentiment of, "Oh, this is what we stand for." But now we're later in our American dominance, and it's less clear what we stand for as a country. ... "
" ... Ruben Gonzalez, chief economist at real estate brokerage Keller Williams, says, “From a consumer perspective, it’s good. For the subsets of the population who are able to maintain their income right now and are feeling confident about their future economic perspectives, [low interest rates] are creating an opportunity to get into the market.” ... "
" ... While that may turn out to be true, at the very least, Amazon Luna has fixed the biggest mistake with Google Stadia. The Luna subscription is all-inclusive for different subsets of games. There’s a base Luna subscription that offers access to games like Control and Resident Evil, and then there are cable-like “channels” mentioned that you can add on, for instance an Ubisoft Luna “channel” subscription would get you access to new games like Watch Dogs Legion right at launch, in addition to other titles. ... "
" ... • Divide data for training and validation purposes. To make sure your AI model is well trained, you should test it with unseen data. Split your available dataset into training and validation subsets with approximately an 80/20 ratio, and use them at the corresponding stages. ... "
" ... • The availability of data does not stop our tendency to involve cognitive biases in the decision-making process. We tend to summarize data in a direction that supports cognitive bias and segment information into subsets that we deem correct, regardless of their actual association or meaning. For example, assigning data to a particular region purely based on its geography and not looking into the real numbers that influence the information. Another factor is that our brain tends to linearize relationships between data points so they are easy to understand, though these relationships might actually be branching. ... "