Posted on 05/07/2020 4:33:21 AM PDT by Renkluaf
Imperial finally released a derivative of Fergusons code. I figured Id do a review of it and send you some of the things I noticed. I dont know your background so apologies if some of this is pitched at the wrong level.
My background. I wrote software for 30 years. I worked at Google between 2006 and 2014, where I was a senior software engineer working on Maps, Gmail and account security. I spent the last five years at a US/UK firm where I designed the companys database product, amongst other jobs and projects. I was also an independent consultant for a couple of years. Obviously Im giving only my own professional opinion and not speaking for my current employer.
. . .
Conclusions. All papers based on this code should be retracted immediately. Imperials modelling efforts should be reset with a new team that isnt under Professor Ferguson, and which has a commitment to replicable results with published code from day one.
On a personal level, Id go further and suggest that all academic epidemiology be defunded. This sort of work is best done by the insurance sector. Insurers employ modellers[sic] and data scientists, but also employ managers whose job is to decide whether a model is accurate enough for real world usage and professional software engineers to ensure model software is properly tested, understandable and so on. Academic efforts dont have these people, and the results speak for themselves.
(Excerpt) Read more at lockdownsceptics.org ...
15,000 lines of spaghetti code in a single file. And the output varies between runs, with the exact same initial conditions. Without explanation.
We put the world under house arrest for this. And won’t admit it was an awful mistake. So most places are still under some form of house arrest.
Cloward-Piven worked. The economic depression is just getting started. Hang on.
Software in academia is written by students, under the direction of professors, neither of which have experienced the discipline of working in a professional environment where there are costs and penalties for sloppiness and unprofessional behavior.
I took a glance at the Github repository (and this is the version of the code that Microsoft engineers spent a month cleaning up).
When you see comments like “ Bugs found - code is stable and seems deterministic again. Will finish more tests and send pull request”, it doesn’t reassure....
L8r
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.