@zkfcfbzr
@lemmy.worldWe're playing a game. I flip a coin. If it lands on Tails, I flip it again. If it lands on Heads, the game ends.
You win if the game ends on an even turn, and lose otherwise.
Define the following events:
A: You win the game
B: The game goes on for at least 4 turns
C: The game goes on for at least 5 turns
What are P(A), P(B), and P(C)? Are A and B independent? How about A and C?
Date | Post |
---|---|
2024-05-07 | Find a+b |
2024-05-09 | What is the area of the shaded region? |
2024-05-15 | Solve for x |
2024-05-17 | Bounding a function |
2024-05-22 | Coin-flipping game |
The image is of a large unit square with five smaller disjoint shaded squares contained entirely within it. The five smaller squares are congruent. Four of them are at each corner of the large square. The fifth is in the center, rotated diagonally, so the center of each of its sides is touched by the vertex from one of the other four squares. You are given that the common length for the five smaller congruent squares is (a-sqrt(2)) / b, where a and b are positive integers. What is the value of a + b?
I read this article and still walked away feeling like I didn't understand the situation that well.
Is it $56 billion that he's already been paid, and he needs to return it? $56 billion he's partially been paid, and he can keep what he has, but won't get the rest? Something more complicated?
For example - if a popular TV show is about to have its season or series finale, or a sport league is about to have its championship game. Are there any websites that track these, without all the noise of less important shows or games, to keep track of?
ESPN.com does seem to track upcoming sporting events pretty well, but it's not that easy to tell which upcoming games are "big" for the league in question or not.
I'm mostly thinking about insurance here. I've been told conflicting information. I live in Florida.
I live with someone who has a driver's license and a car, but I don't have either. I've avoided getting one because I have no interest in car ownership, and I feel like if I started driving regularly I'd probably die - I have driven before but I really don't think it's something I'd ever get good at.
It's undeniable that having one would be convenient though - for rare occasions like emergencies at a minimum but also other scenarios.
I know almost nothing about how this stuff works. If I get a license, am I required to acquire and pay for insurance, even if I don't own a car or regularly drive? Or will the person I live with have to pay more for their insurance? Are there any other costs or downsides associated with it that I might not be thinking of?
Thanks.