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#cost-benefit-analysis — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #cost-benefit-analysis, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. "The 'jai' programming language was designed in a very reality-based way to solve specific problems that we had when developing very complex software (in our case, video games). We'll demo some features of the language and explain why design decisions were made the way they were."
    youtube.com/watch?v=IdpD5QIVOK
    #plt #jai #gamedev #systemsprogramming #costbenefitanalysis

  2. A cost benefit analysis is something we can use in both our personal life and in business. Is the cost worth it? Do we need it? Do the positives outweigh the negatives? What are the risks involved? #costbenefitanalysis #risk #business #personal

  3. Stakeholders are more than opponents who might throw sand in the gears; they might actually spot considerations you hadn’t thought of. This also raises questions on how we do #costbenefitanalysis under #DeepUncertainty #wickedproblems #postnormalscience (9/9)

  4. While resolving the various scientific uncertainties, as Andries Richter, Suphi Sen, and myself did in our #costbenefitanalysis paper (doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsae10), is important, just getting the facts straight does not address all controversy (4/9)

  5. My paper with Andries Richter and Suphi Sen is out! doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsae10 In this paper we asked the question: is the #mesopelagic zone still such an attractive source of animal protein if we take into account that #fishing it might disrupt important #carbon cycles? We did a #costbenefitanalysis under the #horizon2020 MEESO project (meeso.org/) to find out (1/5)

  6. 3/
    On the illusion of precision:
    "Policy prescription may need recourse to #CostBenefitAnalysis and related concepts [...]. Yet these hyper precise cost-benefit analyses of the pandemic clash with implication which policy cannot ignore: are we looking at all numbers? Are we looking at the right numbers?" [1]

    which reminds me a vast 2022 review: "There is strong evidence that valuing nature on the basis of market prices is contributing to the present biodiversity crisis" [2]

    #NonMarketValuation