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Gustaf getting wedged in a tunnel. This AI is good.
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So this is how it ends…
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Login Soho303 : Soho303
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Do you have access to average number of words used per post per community member?
Asking for a friend.
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I don’t have access to private or real-time data about specific communities or their users. So, I cannot provide the average number of words used per post per community member for any particular community (like Reddit, Discord, forums, etc.), unless those statistics have been publicly reported.
However, I can help with:
- General estimates: There is some public research or aggregated data for platforms like Reddit, Stack Exchange, etc., about average post length, but rarely broken down per user.
- How to calculate it: If you have access to the post data for your community, I can explain how to analyze it to get this kind of metric.
- Best practices in data analysis for online communities.
If you want rough examples or guidance on calculating this metric, just let me know what platform or data you’re interested in!
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You’re welcome! 😄
Sounds like @Gators1 was feeling a bit stressed—glad to hear there’s some relief now! If you need help with anything else, feel free to ask. Go Gators! 🐊
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@Gpt Does Florida have more athletes arrested than other schools?
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The perception that the University of Florida (UF) has had a notable number of athlete arrests often comes up in sports discussions, especially among college football fans. However, the full picture is more nuanced:
What Is the Claim?
Fans sometimes joke about “Florida Man” headlines or reference eras (especially the mid-2000s) when several UF football players were arrested for a variety of incidents.
What Does the Data Say?
- No Official, Up-to-Date, Comprehensive Database: There is no universally accepted, continuously updated database that tracks athlete arrests at all schools in real-time.
- In the past, sites like the now-defunct “Arrest Nation” and reporters like Matt Hinton (Dr. Saturday) and Mike Rosenberg (formerly at the Detroit Free Press) tracked college football player arrests.
- Lists compiled around 2010–2015 sometimes showed Florida among schools with higher numbers of reported athlete arrests, particularly during the Urban Meyer coaching era (2005–2010), with published numbers ranging from 25-31 football-related arrests in that period.
Recent Context
- In the last decade, Florida’s rate of athlete arrests does not stand out as exceptionally high compared to other large, high-profile football programs.
- Major programs like Florida State, Oklahoma, Alabama, and Georgia have also had multiple athlete arrests in different years.
- Much of the perception comes from UF’s national profile combined with some high-profile or unusual cases.
Conclusion
No, as of now, Florida does not consistently have more athlete arrests than other major schools, though it had a particularly infamous streak in the late 2000s. Public perceptions are affected by media coverage and the prominence of the program.
Sources & Further Reading:
- USA Today – College football player arrests (2016 retrospective)
- The Palm Beach Post – “Before Aaron Hernandez, lots of trouble during Meyer’s reign at Florida” (2013)
- SB Nation, “Are Florida football players the most arrested in the country?” (2010)
TL;DR:
Florida had a bit of a reputation in the late 2000s, but isn’t consistently or currently the worst in terms of athlete arrests among major colleges.
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@Gpt Is a strawberry a berry?
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Great question! Botanically, a strawberry is not a true berry.
Here’s why:
- Botanical definition of a berry: A berry is a type of simple fleshy fruit that develops from a single ovary and contains seeds embedded in the flesh (e.g., tomatoes, bananas, grapes).
- Strawberries: What we call a “strawberry” develops from the receptacle (the thickened part of the stem) not from the ovary of the flower.
- The tiny “seeds” on the outside of a strawberry are actually individual fruits called achenes, each containing a seed.
So, botanically, strawberries are classified as a “aggregate accessory fruit,” not a true berry.
Fun fact: True berries include bananas, kiwis, and tomatoes!
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@Gpt Is a raspberry a berry?
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Surprisingly, a raspberry is not a true botanical berry!
Botanically speaking:
- A berry is a fleshy fruit produced from a single ovary, and it must have its seeds embedded in the flesh (like a grape, blueberry, or tomato).
- A raspberry is actually an aggregate fruit. That means it develops from a single flower with many ovaries — and each little “bubble” on the raspberry (called a drupelet) comes from a separate ovary.
In summary:
- Raspberry: Not a botanical berry. It’s an aggregate fruit.
- Blueberry & grape: True berries!
- Strawberry: Also not a berry (it’s an aggregate accessory fruit).
But in everyday language, we still happily call raspberries “berries”! 🍇🍓
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@Gpt Is a banana a berry?
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Yes, a banana is botanically classified as a berry.
Here’s why:
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Botanical Definition of a Berry: In botany, a berry is a fleshy fruit produced from a single ovary with the entire ovary wall maturing into an edible pericarp (fruit wall). Berries typically have several seeds.
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Banana’s Structure: Bananas develop from a flower with a single ovary and have a soft, edible pericarp. They contain small seeds embedded inside.
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Other Examples: Kiwis, grapes, and tomatoes are also true berries by botanical standards. Meanwhile, fruits like strawberries and raspberries are not berries botanically.
So, even though it might not match our culinary expectations, the banana is a berry in the scientific sense!
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I give up
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Great question! Botanically, a strawberry is not a true berry.
Here’s why:
- Botanical definition of a berry: A berry is a type of simple fleshy fruit that develops from a single ovary and contains seeds embedded in the flesh (e.g., tomatoes, bananas, grapes).
- Strawberries: What we call a “strawberry” develops from the receptacle (the thickened part of the stem) not from the ovary of the flower.
- The tiny “seeds” on the outside of a strawberry are actually individual fruits called achenes, each containing a seed.
So, botanically, strawberries are classified as a “aggregate accessory fruit,” not a true berry.
Fun fact: True berries include bananas, kiwis, and tomatoes!
How about the avocado? Is that a berry?