notajedi wrote on Jul 9
th, 2013 at 5:37pm:
Calculus I, Calculus II, Calculus III, Probability & Statistics I, Probability & Statistics II, Discrete Structures. Probably something else in there that I have forgotten, I could go get my transcripts though.
Now, what classes did you all take?
Unsure why it is attack the poster and not the topic, but I can be a pubescent phallus also. Something about the numbers that you don't like?
comparing the best of one point to the worst of one point is a way to look at graphs that manipulate the data so that it specifically looks towards the point you want to make, i.e., DDO is dying extremely quickly.
However if you look at point to point, such as mid to mid, or trough to trough, you will see a more realistic change in data, as you are not looking to the complete peak of the graph to the utter low of the graph.
So if you looked at the trough to the trough and found a 2,500 log in difference then you can say that people playing the game are down by a considerable number, but at the point where you manipulate the data to specifically show the point you are trying to make, so by pointing tip to trough, you are saying 5,000 players down and are drawing an unfair and illogical conclusion.
For example, let's say I took the trough of the older section to the tip of the newer section I might get a comparison of 15,000 log ins to 15,000 log ins, versus the trough to trough where I get 15,000 to 12,500.
The first way of looking at the data says that we have lost no players, the second shows that we have lost approximately 2,500 loss in log ins.....the former is entirely inaccurate, and the latter is more accurate (down to errors in the graph really).
So if you are looking from tip of when we had more players to trough when we have less players you are drawing an inaccurate conclusion based on numbers that are not supposed to be read in the way you are putting them, and you are drawing incorrect conclusions about the data.