In many cases it is unnecessary, but in my old media days there was a distinction maintained between "tape leader" and "film leader," they being made of different materials.
And they're still making changes to materials, widths, methods of encoding and more to this day. IBM, I believe, just debuted a new tape system where each reel can hold something like
12 terabytes of data.
The hit rate of 50% does not have any particular significance in my tests. I would like (ideally) a hit rate of 100% for credible answers, and a hit rate of 0% for non-credible ones.
I offered you a test designed specifically to determine that. It's main feature was that you could assess credibility separately from knowing whether the person had given the correct answer.
We can do it with four choices instead of ten, if you'd like. However, the fewer the choices, the much more participation you'll need.
You can work with me to design the protocol. You continue to decline to do so. Instead you prefer to ask continually changing questions on Yahoo! every two months or so, with about one or two actual answers and maybe a couple more that don't choose any answer at all.
At what rate would you have to ask a 1-in-4 question, getting two credible answers, to determine 100% that some force other than chance is at play?
Hint: It's a trick question. The limit is infinity.
My impression was also than you wanted to choose something funny, because of the obvious opposition between "loss" and "leader".
That's not what you said. You said that my handle showed a duality in my nature. You said that when I gave you an answer you found credible (and also happened to be, by chance, correct), that it showed the "leader" side of my nature. You said that when I disavowed that answer, that I was showing the "loss" side of my nature.
You can scroll back and see your own words for yourself. You were the one who brought my forum handle into this. I didn't mention it at all until you claimed it had some truth value regarding my answers to your poorly designed and recklessly biased tests.