Comment on Programmer tries to explain binary search to the police
CosmicCleric@lemmy.world 11 months agoDepends on how long the smoke remains in the air.
Comment on Programmer tries to explain binary search to the police
CosmicCleric@lemmy.world 11 months agoDepends on how long the smoke remains in the air.
starman2112@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
If it’s not “for the duration of the rest of the video,” then binary search would be useless
CosmicCleric@lemmy.world 11 months ago
That’s not true. It only has to be long enough to be detectable, by landing on a strip of video that it exists on. It’ll be harder, definately, but still doable.
starman2112@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
Maybe I have no understanding of what a binary search is. My understanding is that you check halfway through the video, see if the thing has happened yet, then skip halfway to the end if it hasn’t. Check again, skip again. When you see the cue that the event has happened, you rewind to halfway between the latest point where the event hadn’t happened yet and the earliest point when it has. Keep doing that and you can pinpoint the exact frame where the event happens in a matter of minutes.
Binary search would be largely useless in cases where you have a good chance of skipping right past the event. If the video is an hour long, and the event happens 34 minutes in and leaves a visual cue that lasts less than 11 minutes, then binary search does not find the event. At that point, watching the video fast forwarded would be the way to go, and that’s not a binary search, that’s just watching the video.
CosmicCleric@lemmy.world 11 months ago
The event has happened, or the aftereffects that the event happened. That is my point, the aftereffects matter as much as the event itself. As long as the ‘after’ looks different than the ‘before’ for any reason, that is a marker to give you an indication on which way to go, rewind, or advance.
And yes, either the effect or the aftereffects has to last long enough to be noticed by humans, less long by AI (faster to detect changes than humans). But the vast majority of events, when humans are involved, leave long aftereffects usually. Yes, not 100% of the time, but usually.