Edward Gibson
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that's pretty general, what they're doing, is just throwing stuff in there which you didn't have to put in there. There's extra words involved. Typically, you may need a few extra words to refer to the things that you're defining outside in some way. Because if you only use it in that one sentence, then there's no reason to introduce extra terms.
So we might have a few more words, but it'll be easier to understand. So I have hope that now that maybe we can make legalese less... less convoluted in this way.
So we might have a few more words, but it'll be easier to understand. So I have hope that now that maybe we can make legalese less... less convoluted in this way.
So we might have a few more words, but it'll be easier to understand. So I have hope that now that maybe we can make legalese less... less convoluted in this way.
He makes Eric. Martinez is the guy you should really put in there. I mean, yeah.
He makes Eric. Martinez is the guy you should really put in there. I mean, yeah.
He makes Eric. Martinez is the guy you should really put in there. I mean, yeah.
That's fascinating.
That's fascinating.
That's fascinating.
So that's about communication. And so this is going back to Shannon. So Shannon, Claude Shannon was a... student at MIT in the 40s. And so he wrote this very influential piece of work about communication theory or information theory. And he was interested in human language, actually. He was interested in this problem of communication, of getting a message from my head to your head.
So that's about communication. And so this is going back to Shannon. So Shannon, Claude Shannon was a... student at MIT in the 40s. And so he wrote this very influential piece of work about communication theory or information theory. And he was interested in human language, actually. He was interested in this problem of communication, of getting a message from my head to your head.
So that's about communication. And so this is going back to Shannon. So Shannon, Claude Shannon was a... student at MIT in the 40s. And so he wrote this very influential piece of work about communication theory or information theory. And he was interested in human language, actually. He was interested in this problem of communication, of getting a message from my head to your head.
And he was concerned or interested in What was a robust way to do that? And so assuming we both speak the same language, we both already speak English, whatever the language is, we speak that. What is a way that I can say the language so that it's most likely to get the signal that I want to you? And then the problem there
And he was concerned or interested in What was a robust way to do that? And so assuming we both speak the same language, we both already speak English, whatever the language is, we speak that. What is a way that I can say the language so that it's most likely to get the signal that I want to you? And then the problem there
And he was concerned or interested in What was a robust way to do that? And so assuming we both speak the same language, we both already speak English, whatever the language is, we speak that. What is a way that I can say the language so that it's most likely to get the signal that I want to you? And then the problem there
in the communication is the noisy channel, is that there's a lot of noise in the system. I don't speak perfectly. I make errors. That's noise. There's background noise. You know that.
in the communication is the noisy channel, is that there's a lot of noise in the system. I don't speak perfectly. I make errors. That's noise. There's background noise. You know that.
in the communication is the noisy channel, is that there's a lot of noise in the system. I don't speak perfectly. I make errors. That's noise. There's background noise. You know that.
Literal background noise. There is white noise in the background or some other kind of noise. There's some speaking going on that you're at a party. That's background noise. You're trying to hear someone. It's hard to understand them because there's all this other stuff going on in the background.