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I've been bumping into many questions like this onethis one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment.

(a) Am I doing the right thing here? (b) Then why is it so uncommon?

EDIT:

After some comments and discussion, my understanding is that the answer to (a) is yes, and then pure machine-learning questions do not belong to SO. There is (I think) an open issue on where to put this OT stuff (my opinion: CrossValidated), but I'll continue this discussion in the thread pointed out in the comments). As for the answer to (b), well... it was more a rhetorical question, but I'll commit myself to the glorious quest of hunting down all machine learning-related OT questions out there.

I've been bumping into many questions like this one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment.

(a) Am I doing the right thing here? (b) Then why is it so uncommon?

EDIT:

After some comments and discussion, my understanding is that the answer to (a) is yes, and then pure machine-learning questions do not belong to SO. There is (I think) an open issue on where to put this OT stuff (my opinion: CrossValidated), but I'll continue this discussion in the thread pointed out in the comments). As for the answer to (b), well... it was more a rhetorical question, but I'll commit myself to the glorious quest of hunting down all machine learning-related OT questions out there.

I've been bumping into many questions like this one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment.

(a) Am I doing the right thing here? (b) Then why is it so uncommon?

EDIT:

After some comments and discussion, my understanding is that the answer to (a) is yes, and then pure machine-learning questions do not belong to SO. There is (I think) an open issue on where to put this OT stuff (my opinion: CrossValidated), but I'll continue this discussion in the thread pointed out in the comments). As for the answer to (b), well... it was more a rhetorical question, but I'll commit myself to the glorious quest of hunting down all machine learning-related OT questions out there.

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I've been bumping into many questions like this one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment.

(a) Am I doing the right thing here? (b) Then why is it so uncommon?

EDIT:

After some comments and discussion, my understanding is that the answer to (a) is yes, and then pure machine-learning questions do not belong to SO. There is (I think) an open issue on where to put this OT stuff (my opinion: CrossValidated), but I'll continue this discussionI'll continue this discussion in the thread pointed out in the comments). As for the answer to (b), well... it was more a rhetorical question, but I'll commit myself to the glorious quest of hunting down all machine learning-related OT questions out there.

I've been bumping into many questions like this one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment.

(a) Am I doing the right thing here? (b) Then why is it so uncommon?

EDIT:

After some comments and discussion, my understanding is that the answer to (a) is yes, and then pure machine-learning questions do not belong to SO. There is (I think) an open issue on where to put this OT stuff (my opinion: CrossValidated), but I'll continue this discussion in the thread pointed out in the comments). As for the answer to (b), well... it was more a rhetorical question, but I'll commit myself to the glorious quest of hunting down all machine learning-related OT questions out there.

I've been bumping into many questions like this one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment.

(a) Am I doing the right thing here? (b) Then why is it so uncommon?

EDIT:

After some comments and discussion, my understanding is that the answer to (a) is yes, and then pure machine-learning questions do not belong to SO. There is (I think) an open issue on where to put this OT stuff (my opinion: CrossValidated), but I'll continue this discussion in the thread pointed out in the comments). As for the answer to (b), well... it was more a rhetorical question, but I'll commit myself to the glorious quest of hunting down all machine learning-related OT questions out there.

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I've been bumping into many questions like this one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment.   

Am(a) Am I doing the right thing here? (b) Then why is it so uncommon?

EDIT:

After some comments and discussion, my understanding is that the answer to (a) is yes, and then pure machine-learning questions do not belong to SO. There is (I think) an open issue on where to put this OT stuff (my opinion: CrossValidated), but I'll continue this discussion in the thread pointed out in the comments). As for the answer to (b), well... it was more a rhetorical question, but I'll commit myself to the glorious quest of hunting down all machine learning-related OT questions out there.

I've been bumping into many questions like this one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment.  Am I doing the right thing here? Then why is it so uncommon?

I've been bumping into many questions like this one lately, and I'm surprised most of them doesn't have any "this question belongs to stats.stackexchange"-like comments. When I find a question regarding, for instance, neural networks that doesn't have anything to do with a concrete implementation (aside from the matlab tag), my first thought is to flag it as off-topic > belongs to Stats and add a comment. 

(a) Am I doing the right thing here? (b) Then why is it so uncommon?

EDIT:

After some comments and discussion, my understanding is that the answer to (a) is yes, and then pure machine-learning questions do not belong to SO. There is (I think) an open issue on where to put this OT stuff (my opinion: CrossValidated), but I'll continue this discussion in the thread pointed out in the comments). As for the answer to (b), well... it was more a rhetorical question, but I'll commit myself to the glorious quest of hunting down all machine learning-related OT questions out there.

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Яois
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Яois
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Яois
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