Biden administration calls for developers to embrace memory-safe programing languages and move away from those that cause buffer overflows and other memory access vulnerabilities.

      • thisfro@slrpnk.net
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        7 months ago

        Average is the mean (i.e. sum of all “skill” divided by the amount of programmers)

        What they were thinking of is the median (50th percentile = 0.5 quantile), which splits the group in two equal sized groups.

        For a bell curve, they are the same values. But think of the example of average incomes: 9 people have an income of 10$, one has an income of 910$. The average income is 100$ ((10*9+910)/10). The median is basically 10 however.

        • Bademantel@feddit.de
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          7 months ago

          The distribution of skill in humans, for various tasks and abilities, can often be approximated by a normal distribution. In that case, as you know, the mean is equal to the average.

          • burlemarx
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            7 months ago

            Actually, in order to test your assumption, you’d need to quantitatively measure skill, which per se is something already problematic, but you’d also need to run a statistical test to confirm the distribution is a normal/Gaussian distribution. People always forget the latter and often produce incorrect statistical inferences.

    • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      The mean is in the center of the bell curve, so I’m not sure what your point is.