Welcome to my blog. This post will serve as an introduction to why I am starting it, share a little about what it will be about, and do so with some basic principles from graph theory. Let’s get started. A mathematical graph is made up of two components, nodes (points) and edges (connecting points). A graph is simply a group of nodes, connected by edges. These edges can be either directed (go both ways) or undirected (one-way). For our purposes, we will be focusing on directed graphs (points connected by one-way arrows) as shown in the diagram below. A graph is just an abstraction used to show the flow of some resource between points. For example, trade patterns can be represented as a directed graph where each port is a node and the goods being transferred are the edges. Now that we have a good idea of what graphs, nodes, and edges are, we’ll define a special type of node called a sink.
I've often felt the same way about constantly consuming information but never producing anything. I think I've only ever posted 1 original tweet in my lifetime! Glad to see you breaking the mold, and I hope there's more output to come!
Interesting analogy, not being a math guy I didn't realize the correlation. Anyway, I have been feeling sink-y myself lately. Looking forward to future posts. Uncle Ron
I've often felt the same way about constantly consuming information but never producing anything. I think I've only ever posted 1 original tweet in my lifetime! Glad to see you breaking the mold, and I hope there's more output to come!
Thanks, Andy! I'm going to find that burner account and retweet you to the moon!
Interesting analogy, not being a math guy I didn't realize the correlation. Anyway, I have been feeling sink-y myself lately. Looking forward to future posts. Uncle Ron
Thanks, Uncle Ron! I appreciate you checking it out. I'm sure there is something you can make and feel a bit less sink-y.