Which again should surprise no one as virtually every virus does. But it also is not spreading exponentially everywhere.Sam Lowry said:
Absolutely fascinating.
Meanwhile the virus continues to spread exponentially.
Which again should surprise no one as virtually every virus does. But it also is not spreading exponentially everywhere.Sam Lowry said:
Absolutely fascinating.
Meanwhile the virus continues to spread exponentially.
Yes, I, would know because I was and am there. But your assumption that I woulld know means that indeed those folk who go out and infect others they are arrogant and selfishOldbear83 said:You would know.Waco1947 said:Those people disobeying are arrogant and selfish.Oldbear83 said:You say so, I see different.PartyBear said:Oldbear83 said:
My gut tells me that, necessary as it may be, having county judges issue the shut-down orders is an act of political cowardice which will backfire.
People who pay no personal cost for such decisions should not be in charge of those decisions.
Actually it is an act of political courage that governors and local leaders have to take. Because frankly no one above that level is leading at all.
Time will tell.
But I pay attention to what people say and do, and already there are some restaurants serving seated patrons in defiance of the ban here in Harris County, and already there are people ignoring shelter-in-place orders in California and Pennsylvania, because the Governors in those places are great in front of TV cameras, but lousy at really understanding what their orders cost regular people.
Not saying I agree with the defiance - I am self-quarantining for 2 weeks because my wife was in Hong Kong caring for her mother, but like I said I look and I listen and it's easy to issue edicts like you are some kind of King, and not make provision for the cost to ordinary people. There is going to be push-back, and that will have its own effect on the virus spread and consequences.
I simply observe your behavior here at S365 and apply it to the broader scale.Waco1947 said:Yes, I, would know because I was and am there. But your assumption that I woulld know means that indeed those folk who go out and infect others they are arrogant and selfishOldbear83 said:You would know.Waco1947 said:Those people disobeying are arrogant and selfish.Oldbear83 said:You say so, I see different.PartyBear said:Oldbear83 said:
My gut tells me that, necessary as it may be, having county judges issue the shut-down orders is an act of political cowardice which will backfire.
People who pay no personal cost for such decisions should not be in charge of those decisions.
Actually it is an act of political courage that governors and local leaders have to take. Because frankly no one above that level is leading at all.
Time will tell.
But I pay attention to what people say and do, and already there are some restaurants serving seated patrons in defiance of the ban here in Harris County, and already there are people ignoring shelter-in-place orders in California and Pennsylvania, because the Governors in those places are great in front of TV cameras, but lousy at really understanding what their orders cost regular people.
Not saying I agree with the defiance - I am self-quarantining for 2 weeks because my wife was in Hong Kong caring for her mother, but like I said I look and I listen and it's easy to issue edicts like you are some kind of King, and not make provision for the cost to ordinary people. There is going to be push-back, and that will have its own effect on the virus spread and consequences.
I agree with your points. My point is even more simplistic. While the charts dragged out by the CDC and elsewhere showed the classic exponent hockey stick expansion, in reality it hasn't come close to materializing in trends, not to mention I don't think people know how exponent growth works. Doubling every x days/weeks/months etc. isn't exponential growth. For a simplistic example, everyone has been dragging out the example of doubling everyday and after 30 days you'd have so much. For perspective, if you started day one with a dime and applied the doubling model, you'd be a billionaire after 30 days. In an exponent model, after two weeks, you'd have all the money in the world.Flaming Moderate said:Exactly. My frustration with the modeling / predictions are:ATL Bear said:Incrementally, not exponentially.Sam Lowry said:It's very interesting to debate the chances of exponential spread and all the factors that play into it.ATL Bear said:
The exponent models are looking more and more far fetched even as we see the rapid expansion of cases and deaths even in the most hard hit areas.
Meanwhile the virus continues to spread exponentially.
1. Governments are responding with draconian measures regardless of actual local impact, pointing to worst case. A sophisticated reaction would be more of a step response. But we're in "monkey see, monkey do" land. But as quash noted, if you under-react, you lose. If you over-react, you can alway play the "if I didn't then millions would have died and we never know how bad it would have been."
2. The models are shockingly unsophisticated. Forecasters pick some assumptions and put them in relatively simple models. They are not great at accounting for diversity around density, climate, population demographics, social determinants of health, socioeconomic factors, etc. So if you take the worst inputs from the worst situation and simply change the denominator, your doomsday numerator frightens.
3. The model certainly cannot account for things like "Kiss a Chinaman" day that supposedly occurred in Italy, which I'm sure helped slow the spread of the virus.
The virus is spreading but not at an alarming rate across the country. Sure, there are dense areas where there is rapid spread, and shockingly areas with high Chinese populations were hit harder first, especially on the coasts where there is more international travel. None of that should surprise anyone.
Exponential growth doesn't simply begin with a value and apply an exponent to it, as with your "all the money in the world" example. The exponent is the number of time intervals applied to the rate of growth plus one. The rate can be anything - 10%, 50%, doubling, etc.ATL Bear said:I agree with your points. My point is even more simplistic. While the charts dragged out by the CDC and elsewhere showed the classic exponent hockey stick expansion, in reality it hasn't come close to materializing in trends, not to mention I don't think people know how exponent growth works. Doubling every x days/weeks/months etc. isn't exponential growth. For a simplistic example, everyone has been dragging out the example of doubling everyday and after 30 days you'd have so much. For perspective, if you started day one with a dime and applied the doubling model, you'd be a billionaire after 30 days. In an exponent model, after two weeks, you'd have all the money in the world.Flaming Moderate said:Exactly. My frustration with the modeling / predictions are:ATL Bear said:Incrementally, not exponentially.Sam Lowry said:It's very interesting to debate the chances of exponential spread and all the factors that play into it.ATL Bear said:
The exponent models are looking more and more far fetched even as we see the rapid expansion of cases and deaths even in the most hard hit areas.
Meanwhile the virus continues to spread exponentially.
1. Governments are responding with draconian measures regardless of actual local impact, pointing to worst case. A sophisticated reaction would be more of a step response. But we're in "monkey see, monkey do" land. But as quash noted, if you under-react, you lose. If you over-react, you can alway play the "if I didn't then millions would have died and we never know how bad it would have been."
2. The models are shockingly unsophisticated. Forecasters pick some assumptions and put them in relatively simple models. They are not great at accounting for diversity around density, climate, population demographics, social determinants of health, socioeconomic factors, etc. So if you take the worst inputs from the worst situation and simply change the denominator, your doomsday numerator frightens.
3. The model certainly cannot account for things like "Kiss a Chinaman" day that supposedly occurred in Italy, which I'm sure helped slow the spread of the virus.
The virus is spreading but not at an alarming rate across the country. Sure, there are dense areas where there is rapid spread, and shockingly areas with high Chinese populations were hit harder first, especially on the coasts where there is more international travel. None of that should surprise anyone.
So no, we're aren't seeing exponential growth as was "estimated".
According to the CDC, day over day (reporting day):Sam Lowry said:Exponential growth doesn't simply begin with a value and apply an exponent to it, as with your "all the money in the world" example. The exponent is the number of time intervals applied to the rate of growth plus one. The rate can be anything - 10%, 50%, doubling, etc.ATL Bear said:I agree with your points. My point is even more simplistic. While the charts dragged out by the CDC and elsewhere showed the classic exponent hockey stick expansion, in reality it hasn't come close to materializing in trends, not to mention I don't think people know how exponent growth works. Doubling every x days/weeks/months etc. isn't exponential growth. For a simplistic example, everyone has been dragging out the example of doubling everyday and after 30 days you'd have so much. For perspective, if you started day one with a dime and applied the doubling model, you'd be a billionaire after 30 days. In an exponent model, after two weeks, you'd have all the money in the world.Flaming Moderate said:Exactly. My frustration with the modeling / predictions are:ATL Bear said:Incrementally, not exponentially.Sam Lowry said:It's very interesting to debate the chances of exponential spread and all the factors that play into it.ATL Bear said:
The exponent models are looking more and more far fetched even as we see the rapid expansion of cases and deaths even in the most hard hit areas.
Meanwhile the virus continues to spread exponentially.
1. Governments are responding with draconian measures regardless of actual local impact, pointing to worst case. A sophisticated reaction would be more of a step response. But we're in "monkey see, monkey do" land. But as quash noted, if you under-react, you lose. If you over-react, you can alway play the "if I didn't then millions would have died and we never know how bad it would have been."
2. The models are shockingly unsophisticated. Forecasters pick some assumptions and put them in relatively simple models. They are not great at accounting for diversity around density, climate, population demographics, social determinants of health, socioeconomic factors, etc. So if you take the worst inputs from the worst situation and simply change the denominator, your doomsday numerator frightens.
3. The model certainly cannot account for things like "Kiss a Chinaman" day that supposedly occurred in Italy, which I'm sure helped slow the spread of the virus.
The virus is spreading but not at an alarming rate across the country. Sure, there are dense areas where there is rapid spread, and shockingly areas with high Chinese populations were hit harder first, especially on the coasts where there is more international travel. None of that should surprise anyone.
So no, we're aren't seeing exponential growth as was "estimated".
That is what was predicted, and it is what the graphs show.
You have to look at the whole picture, not just a few days.Flaming Moderate said:According to the CDC, day over day (reporting day):Sam Lowry said:Exponential growth doesn't simply begin with a value and apply an exponent to it, as with your "all the money in the world" example. The exponent is the number of time intervals applied to the rate of growth plus one. The rate can be anything - 10%, 50%, doubling, etc.ATL Bear said:I agree with your points. My point is even more simplistic. While the charts dragged out by the CDC and elsewhere showed the classic exponent hockey stick expansion, in reality it hasn't come close to materializing in trends, not to mention I don't think people know how exponent growth works. Doubling every x days/weeks/months etc. isn't exponential growth. For a simplistic example, everyone has been dragging out the example of doubling everyday and after 30 days you'd have so much. For perspective, if you started day one with a dime and applied the doubling model, you'd be a billionaire after 30 days. In an exponent model, after two weeks, you'd have all the money in the world.Flaming Moderate said:Exactly. My frustration with the modeling / predictions are:ATL Bear said:Incrementally, not exponentially.Sam Lowry said:It's very interesting to debate the chances of exponential spread and all the factors that play into it.ATL Bear said:
The exponent models are looking more and more far fetched even as we see the rapid expansion of cases and deaths even in the most hard hit areas.
Meanwhile the virus continues to spread exponentially.
1. Governments are responding with draconian measures regardless of actual local impact, pointing to worst case. A sophisticated reaction would be more of a step response. But we're in "monkey see, monkey do" land. But as quash noted, if you under-react, you lose. If you over-react, you can alway play the "if I didn't then millions would have died and we never know how bad it would have been."
2. The models are shockingly unsophisticated. Forecasters pick some assumptions and put them in relatively simple models. They are not great at accounting for diversity around density, climate, population demographics, social determinants of health, socioeconomic factors, etc. So if you take the worst inputs from the worst situation and simply change the denominator, your doomsday numerator frightens.
3. The model certainly cannot account for things like "Kiss a Chinaman" day that supposedly occurred in Italy, which I'm sure helped slow the spread of the virus.
The virus is spreading but not at an alarming rate across the country. Sure, there are dense areas where there is rapid spread, and shockingly areas with high Chinese populations were hit harder first, especially on the coasts where there is more international travel. None of that should surprise anyone.
So no, we're aren't seeing exponential growth as was "estimated".
That is what was predicted, and it is what the graphs show.
1. Monday - 18,185 new cases (assume that includes the weekend, so expect it to be higher)
2. Tuesday - 10,770 new cases
3. Wednesday - 10,270 new cases
I do not think that is exponential growth. When considering the lag in testing, as noted there is a huge novel impact to increases in cases as a function of testing not incidence.
The good news is the mortality is still around 1.3% and 60% of cases are in New York, Washington, and California.
Correct. Hence, it is not growing exponentially by your definition. Now of course the data could change tomorrow.Sam Lowry said:You have to look at the whole picture, not just a few days.Flaming Moderate said:According to the CDC, day over day (reporting day):Sam Lowry said:Exponential growth doesn't simply begin with a value and apply an exponent to it, as with your "all the money in the world" example. The exponent is the number of time intervals applied to the rate of growth plus one. The rate can be anything - 10%, 50%, doubling, etc.ATL Bear said:I agree with your points. My point is even more simplistic. While the charts dragged out by the CDC and elsewhere showed the classic exponent hockey stick expansion, in reality it hasn't come close to materializing in trends, not to mention I don't think people know how exponent growth works. Doubling every x days/weeks/months etc. isn't exponential growth. For a simplistic example, everyone has been dragging out the example of doubling everyday and after 30 days you'd have so much. For perspective, if you started day one with a dime and applied the doubling model, you'd be a billionaire after 30 days. In an exponent model, after two weeks, you'd have all the money in the world.Flaming Moderate said:Exactly. My frustration with the modeling / predictions are:ATL Bear said:Incrementally, not exponentially.Sam Lowry said:It's very interesting to debate the chances of exponential spread and all the factors that play into it.ATL Bear said:
The exponent models are looking more and more far fetched even as we see the rapid expansion of cases and deaths even in the most hard hit areas.
Meanwhile the virus continues to spread exponentially.
1. Governments are responding with draconian measures regardless of actual local impact, pointing to worst case. A sophisticated reaction would be more of a step response. But we're in "monkey see, monkey do" land. But as quash noted, if you under-react, you lose. If you over-react, you can alway play the "if I didn't then millions would have died and we never know how bad it would have been."
2. The models are shockingly unsophisticated. Forecasters pick some assumptions and put them in relatively simple models. They are not great at accounting for diversity around density, climate, population demographics, social determinants of health, socioeconomic factors, etc. So if you take the worst inputs from the worst situation and simply change the denominator, your doomsday numerator frightens.
3. The model certainly cannot account for things like "Kiss a Chinaman" day that supposedly occurred in Italy, which I'm sure helped slow the spread of the virus.
The virus is spreading but not at an alarming rate across the country. Sure, there are dense areas where there is rapid spread, and shockingly areas with high Chinese populations were hit harder first, especially on the coasts where there is more international travel. None of that should surprise anyone.
So no, we're aren't seeing exponential growth as was "estimated".
That is what was predicted, and it is what the graphs show.
1. Monday - 18,185 new cases (assume that includes the weekend, so expect it to be higher)
2. Tuesday - 10,770 new cases
3. Wednesday - 10,270 new cases
I do not think that is exponential growth. When considering the lag in testing, as noted there is a huge novel impact to increases in cases as a function of testing not incidence.
The good news is the mortality is still around 1.3% and 60% of cases are in New York, Washington, and California.
So are you. These models aren't close to exponential by any standard. And the link you provided doesn't say what you think it does from a mathematics perspective. These are attempts at predictive paranoia. I would have thought you'd be above it.Sam Lowry said:
You're smarter than this.
What are you talking about?jupiter said:
You were warned repeatedly that this could happen. Weeks, months, years, even decades in advance generally, and more recently to this specific exact sp threat. Acting then could have cost you pennies . You callously ignored every warning.
Worse, not even did you fail to act , even more unforgivably, you completely failed to prepare.
You learned ziltch, zero ,nothing from the 2008 financial crisis which blew up in a similar fashion.
You never saw that coming either. Now you're blaming us for the lockdowns because you have to deal with the consequences? Remind me again why I should care what you have to say? Was it worth it to YOU? You have noone to blame but yourself, why should we listen to you now?
I'm curious to know what you think it says.ATL Bear said:And the link you provided doesn't say what you think it does from a mathematics perspective.Sam Lowry said:
You're smarter than this.
I'm awaiting a better one. Feel free to chip in.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
Sam Lowry said:I'm curious to know what you think it says.ATL Bear said:And the link you provided doesn't say what you think it does from a mathematics perspective.Sam Lowry said:
You're smarter than this.
Anyway, cases are doubling at least every two or three days (which is faster than any other country). That's what everyone means when they say it's spreading exponentially. Here's what it looks like on a graph:
These are facts, not predictions.
Well, here are the facts as I know them:Sam Lowry said:I'm curious to know what you think it says.ATL Bear said:And the link you provided doesn't say what you think it does from a mathematics perspective.Sam Lowry said:
You're smarter than this.
Anyway, cases are doubling at least every two or three days (which is faster than any other country). That's what everyone means when they say it's spreading exponentially. Here's what it looks like on a graph:
These are facts, not predictions.
x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
This is a prediction.Forest Bueller_bf said:
Well the fact is most of these cases were already out there, we are just now getting the results of the backlog of tests and well finally testing people that have the illness.
This will start decreasing by the end of the week or at most end of next week, mainly because the backlog of testing will catch up, some because the lockdown will start working.
Cases will still increase, but at a decreasing rate.
Sam Lowry said:This is a prediction.Forest Bueller_bf said:
Well the fact is most of these cases were already out there, we are just now getting the results of the backlog of tests and well finally testing people that have the illness.
This will start decreasing by the end of the week or at most end of next week, mainly because the backlog of testing will catch up, some because the lockdown will start working.
Cases will still increase, but at a decreasing rate.
I hope you're right.
Yes a prediction. I'm wrong plenty. But, if we are really sheltering and 5 days is the average time for symptoms to show up, the end of next week is 10 days away. There should be a slow in the uptick of the spread.Sam Lowry said:This is a prediction.Forest Bueller_bf said:
Well the fact is most of these cases were already out there, we are just now getting the results of the backlog of tests and well finally testing people that have the illness.
This will start decreasing by the end of the week or at most end of next week, mainly because the backlog of testing will catch up, some because the lockdown will start working.
Cases will still increase, but at a decreasing rate.
I hope you're right.
In fairness to what you have said, instead of the growth being exponential right now, I would consider the growth to be accelerating.Sam Lowry said:This is a prediction.Forest Bueller_bf said:
Well the fact is most of these cases were already out there, we are just now getting the results of the backlog of tests and well finally testing people that have the illness.
This will start decreasing by the end of the week or at most end of next week, mainly because the backlog of testing will catch up, some because the lockdown will start working.
Cases will still increase, but at a decreasing rate.
I hope you're right.
Tell you what, I'll defend myself, mkay?HashTag said:Not to defend quash, but it's possible he's not purposely telling lies. He seems to not know the difference in his opinion vs fact.Oldbear83 said:You be you quash, and I will be honest, as I always am.quash said:Oldbear83 said:You would know.Waco1947 said:Those people disobeying are arrogant and selfish.Oldbear83 said:You say so, I see different.PartyBear said:Oldbear83 said:
My gut tells me that, necessary as it may be, having county judges issue the shut-down orders is an act of political cowardice which will backfire.
People who pay no personal cost for such decisions should not be in charge of those decisions.
Actually it is an act of political courage that governors and local leaders have to take. Because frankly no one above that level is leading at all.
Time will tell.
But I pay attention to what people say and do, and already there are some restaurants serving seated patrons in defiance of the ban here in Harris County, and already there are people ignoring shelter-in-place orders in California and Pennsylvania, because the Governors in those places are great in front of TV cameras, but lousy at really understanding what their orders cost regular people.
Not saying I agree with the defiance - I am self-quarantining for 2 weeks because my wife was in Hong Kong caring for her mother, but like I said I look and I listen and it's easy to issue edicts like you are some kind of King, and not make provision for the cost to ordinary people. There is going to be push-back, and that will have its own effect on the virus spread and consequences.Yes, he has been fighting arrogant and selfish types for a long time, He certainly recognizes the behavior.Quote:
.
This is fun!
Like all the other wacky libbies, quash sees what he believes instead of the other way around
Forest Bueller_bf said:In fairness to what you have said, instead of the growth being exponential right now, I would consider the growth to be accelerating.Sam Lowry said:This is a prediction.Forest Bueller_bf said:
Well the fact is most of these cases were already out there, we are just now getting the results of the backlog of tests and well finally testing people that have the illness.
This will start decreasing by the end of the week or at most end of next week, mainly because the backlog of testing will catch up, some because the lockdown will start working.
Cases will still increase, but at a decreasing rate.
I hope you're right.
Gains 8,000, then 9000, then 10,000, now about 11,000 a day. If the trend continues we could see us gaining 20,000 cases a day in 10 days.
Like I said, hopefully it is much less than this in 10 days.
03/22 9,339 3/23 10,168 3/24 11,089 Possibly a different source of data. Botton line, the trend is upward.Jack Bauer said:Forest Bueller_bf said:In fairness to what you have said, instead of the growth being exponential right now, I would consider the growth to be accelerating.Sam Lowry said:This is a prediction.Forest Bueller_bf said:
Well the fact is most of these cases were already out there, we are just now getting the results of the backlog of tests and well finally testing people that have the illness.
This will start decreasing by the end of the week or at most end of next week, mainly because the backlog of testing will catch up, some because the lockdown will start working.
Cases will still increase, but at a decreasing rate.
I hope you're right.
Gains 8,000, then 9000, then 10,000, now about 11,000 a day. If the trend continues we could see us gaining 20,000 cases a day in 10 days.
Like I said, hopefully it is much less than this in 10 days.
https://gisanddata.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/bda7594740fd40299423467b48e9ecf6
New cases each day in US:
3/17: 1.4k
3/18: 5.9k
3/19: 5.4k
3/20 6.4k
3/21: 7.8k
3/22: 10.6k
3/23: 9.9k
It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
Absolute BS. "Exponential" does not mean "at first". Geometric expansion could be called "exponential" using words that carelessly.Sam Lowry said:It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
S. Korea implemented that plan upfront: test, quarantine the positives and test their contacts. Our systemic failure has been testing.Oldbear83 said:Absolute BS. "Exponential" does not mean "at first". Geometric expansion could be called "exponential" using words that carelessly.Sam Lowry said:It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
At some point it's going to be obvious that dozens of millions of people in the US will be exposed to C-19, and we'll see maybe 2 million cases. That's serious of course, but it means less than one percent of the population will contract the disease.
When people understand that A) the virus will infect millions, but also B) most Americans won't be infected, nor will someone in their family. That will create pressure for Congress to come up with a plan which protects against spread of the virus, but puts people back to work and backs off on restrictions.
Frankly, I don't see anyone right now smart enough to figure out a plan which does both of those goals.
I disagree. Korea has a much smaller population, so we should be compared to other large populations who are also highly mobile.quash said:S. Korea implemented that plan upfront: test, quarantine the positives and test their contacts. Our systemic failure has been testing.Oldbear83 said:Absolute BS. "Exponential" does not mean "at first". Geometric expansion could be called "exponential" using words that carelessly.Sam Lowry said:It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
At some point it's going to be obvious that dozens of millions of people in the US will be exposed to C-19, and we'll see maybe 2 million cases. That's serious of course, but it means less than one percent of the population will contract the disease.
When people understand that A) the virus will infect millions, but also B) most Americans won't be infected, nor will someone in their family. That will create pressure for Congress to come up with a plan which protects against spread of the virus, but puts people back to work and backs off on restrictions.
Frankly, I don't see anyone right now smart enough to figure out a plan which does both of those goals.
For our purposes, exponential and geometric are the same thing. The point with regard to parabolic growth is that the rate of increase does not appear to be falling.Oldbear83 said:Absolute BS. "Exponential" does not mean "at first". Geometric expansion could be called "exponential" using words that carelessly.Sam Lowry said:It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
At some point it's going to be obvious that dozens of millions of people in the US will be exposed to C-19, and we'll see maybe 2 million cases. That's serious of course, but it means less than one percent of the population will contract the disease.
When people understand that A) the virus will infect millions, but also B) most Americans won't be infected, nor will someone in their family. That will create pressure for Congress to come up with a plan which protects against spread of the virus, but puts people back to work and backs off on restrictions.
Frankly, I don't see anyone right now smart enough to figure out a plan which does both of those goals.
No, they are not at all the same thing, especially with regard to projections.Sam Lowry said:For our purposes, exponential and geometric are the same thing. The point with regard to parabolic growth is that the rate of increase does not appear to be falling.Oldbear83 said:Absolute BS. "Exponential" does not mean "at first". Geometric expansion could be called "exponential" using words that carelessly.Sam Lowry said:It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
At some point it's going to be obvious that dozens of millions of people in the US will be exposed to C-19, and we'll see maybe 2 million cases. That's serious of course, but it means less than one percent of the population will contract the disease.
When people understand that A) the virus will infect millions, but also B) most Americans won't be infected, nor will someone in their family. That will create pressure for Congress to come up with a plan which protects against spread of the virus, but puts people back to work and backs off on restrictions.
Frankly, I don't see anyone right now smart enough to figure out a plan which does both of those goals.
Scale doesn't change the solution. And Koreans are highly mobile.Oldbear83 said:I disagree. Korea has a much smaller population, so we should be compared to other large populations who are also highly mobile.quash said:S. Korea implemented that plan upfront: test, quarantine the positives and test their contacts. Our systemic failure has been testing.Oldbear83 said:Absolute BS. "Exponential" does not mean "at first". Geometric expansion could be called "exponential" using words that carelessly.Sam Lowry said:It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
At some point it's going to be obvious that dozens of millions of people in the US will be exposed to C-19, and we'll see maybe 2 million cases. That's serious of course, but it means less than one percent of the population will contract the disease.
When people understand that A) the virus will infect millions, but also B) most Americans won't be infected, nor will someone in their family. That will create pressure for Congress to come up with a plan which protects against spread of the virus, but puts people back to work and backs off on restrictions.
Frankly, I don't see anyone right now smart enough to figure out a plan which does both of those goals.
Scale matters. Locking down a city which is compliant by nature and one of a few of any size is much easier than the same effort here.quash said:Scale doesn't change the solution. And Koreans are highly mobile.Oldbear83 said:I disagree. Korea has a much smaller population, so we should be compared to other large populations who are also highly mobile.quash said:S. Korea implemented that plan upfront: test, quarantine the positives and test their contacts. Our systemic failure has been testing.Oldbear83 said:Absolute BS. "Exponential" does not mean "at first". Geometric expansion could be called "exponential" using words that carelessly.Sam Lowry said:It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
At some point it's going to be obvious that dozens of millions of people in the US will be exposed to C-19, and we'll see maybe 2 million cases. That's serious of course, but it means less than one percent of the population will contract the disease.
When people understand that A) the virus will infect millions, but also B) most Americans won't be infected, nor will someone in their family. That will create pressure for Congress to come up with a plan which protects against spread of the virus, but puts people back to work and backs off on restrictions.
Frankly, I don't see anyone right now smart enough to figure out a plan which does both of those goals.
Asian societies are far more conformist while Western culture is far more individualistic. I made that point on this board weeks ago.Oldbear83 said:Scale matters. Locking down a city which is compliant by nature and one of a few of any size is much easier than the same effort here.quash said:Scale doesn't change the solution. And Koreans are highly mobile.Oldbear83 said:I disagree. Korea has a much smaller population, so we should be compared to other large populations who are also highly mobile.quash said:S. Korea implemented that plan upfront: test, quarantine the positives and test their contacts. Our systemic failure has been testing.Oldbear83 said:Absolute BS. "Exponential" does not mean "at first". Geometric expansion could be called "exponential" using words that carelessly.Sam Lowry said:It is often exponential at first. It depends largely on the amount of intervention (a.k.a. "panic and hysteria") applied to the situation early on. The best you can say in this case is that if it isn't exponential, it's close enough that it's hard for most experts to tell the difference.Oldbear83 said:x to the power of n is an exponent. And if you look at history, virus growth is parabolic, not exponential.Oldbear83 said:
Just because it gets an entry in wikipedia, does not change the actual definition of 'exponential'
At some point it's going to be obvious that dozens of millions of people in the US will be exposed to C-19, and we'll see maybe 2 million cases. That's serious of course, but it means less than one percent of the population will contract the disease.
When people understand that A) the virus will infect millions, but also B) most Americans won't be infected, nor will someone in their family. That will create pressure for Congress to come up with a plan which protects against spread of the virus, but puts people back to work and backs off on restrictions.
Frankly, I don't see anyone right now smart enough to figure out a plan which does both of those goals.
Cherry-picking what you want to consider is no way to find valid answers.