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have you seen this?
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I think it's easier to think of YOU having to pick doors twice instead of your friend picking a door the first time. Find the probability of you picking a car on the SECOND time. Then you can draw a simple possibility tree and multiply the probabilities to come to a conclusion.... and the conclusion i got was that it made no difference who picked first
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Correct me if I'm doing this wrong =)

Latest revision as of 17:21, 14 September 2008

I think it's easier to think of YOU having to pick doors twice instead of your friend picking a door the first time. Find the probability of you picking a car on the SECOND time. Then you can draw a simple possibility tree and multiply the probabilities to come to a conclusion.... and the conclusion i got was that it made no difference who picked first

Correct me if I'm doing this wrong =)

Alumni Liaison

has a message for current ECE438 students.

Sean Hu, ECE PhD 2009