As a youth soccer coach, I could have predicted this finding:
"Under the first scheme, a reward signal is sent only to robots that score a goal. As the match progresses, every team member ends up learning the same sequence of behaviors -- going after the ball in a solo effort to score. As a result, the circles on the screen bunch around a single point -- wherever the ball is -- leaving the rest of the field open to attack."
Apparently this guy has never watched six year olds play soccer with Mommy and Daddy cheering from the sidelines for them to "kick it!"
It's just another reality check for the market
on
Boo No More
·
· Score: 2
If anything, the collapse of boo.com and the study should help the marketplace realize that it doesn't matter how good your idea is, execution is where the long-term money comes from.
Maybe we'll start to see a backlash in the IPO prices of dotcoms, now that it's been demonstrated that poorly planned, poorly run cyberspace retailers fail just like poorly planned, poorly run meatspace retailers.
"I hear they are looking for replacements, that know the difference between the word 'loose' and 'lose'."
I hear they are looking for replacements that can identify comma splices as well.
The guy was out in the boondocks and made such a rental impractical. There's ideal, and there's real. Oh, but you'd have to RTFA once to know.
As a youth soccer coach, I could have predicted this finding:
"Under the first scheme, a reward signal is sent only to robots that score a goal. As the match progresses, every team member ends up learning the same sequence of behaviors -- going after the ball in a solo effort to score. As a result, the circles on the screen bunch around a single point -- wherever the ball is -- leaving the rest of the field open to attack."
Apparently this guy has never watched six year olds play soccer with Mommy and Daddy cheering from the sidelines for them to "kick it!"
If anything, the collapse of boo.com and the study should help the marketplace realize that it doesn't matter how good your idea is, execution is where the long-term money comes from.
Maybe we'll start to see a backlash in the IPO prices of dotcoms, now that it's been demonstrated that poorly planned, poorly run cyberspace retailers fail just like poorly planned, poorly run meatspace retailers.
An easy-to-remember URL for the search-impaired. Should help out with the mainstreaming of Linux.