Contextual Multi–Armed Bandit Problems in Python
Free Download Contextual Multi–Armed Bandit Problems in Python
Published 3/2024
Created by Hadi Aghazadeh
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz, 2 Ch
Genre: eLearning | Language: English | Duration: 70 Lectures ( 9h 0m ) | Size: 2.9 GB


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Gentleman Bandit The True Story of Black Bart, the Old West's Most Infamous Stagecoach Robber [Audiobook]
Free Download John Boessenecker, Stephen Graybill (Narrator) "Gentleman Bandit: The True Story of Black Bart, the Old West's Most Infamous Stagecoach Robber"
English | ASIN: B0B2KC71XV | 2023 | MP3@64 kbps | ~10:20:00 | 294 MB
New York Times bestselling author and award-winning historian John Boessenecker separates fact from fiction in the first new biography in decades of Black Bart, the Wild West's most mysterious gentleman bandit.
Black Bart is widely regarded today as not only the most notorious stage robber of the Old West but also the best behaved. Over his lifetime, Black Bart held up at least twenty-nine stagecoaches in California and Oregon with mild, polite commands, stealing from Wells Fargo and the US mail but never robbing a passenger. Such behavior earned him the title of a true "gentleman bandit."
His real name was Charles E. Boles, and in the public eye, Charles lived quietly as a boulevardier in San Francisco, the wealthiest and most exciting city in the American West. Boles was an educated man who traveled among respectable crowds. Because he did not drink, fight or consort with prostitutes, his true calling as America's greatest stage robber was never suspected until his final capture in 1883. Sheriffs searched and struggled for years to find him, and newspaper editors had a field day reporting his exploits. Legends and rumors trailed his name until his mysterious death, and his ultimate fate remains one of the greatest mysteries of the Old West.


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Otto Wood, the Bandit The Freighthopping Thief, Bootlegger, and Convicted Murderer behind the Appalachian Ballads
Free Download Trevor McKenzie, "Otto Wood, the Bandit: The Freighthopping Thief, Bootlegger, and Convicted Murderer behind the Appalachian Ballads"
English | ISBN: 1469664712 | 2021 | 176 pages | EPUB | 2 MB
Legions of bluegrass fans know the name Otto Wood (1893-1930) from a ballad made popular by Doc Watson, telling the story of Wood's crimes and violent death. However, few know the history of this Appalachian figure beyond the larger-than-life version heard in song. Trevor McKenzie reconstructs Wood's life, tracing how a Wilkes County juvenile delinquent became a celebrated folk hero. Throughout his short life, Wood was jailed for numerous offenses, stole countless automobiles, lost his left hand, and made eleven escapes from five state penitentiaries, including four from the North Carolina State Prison after a 1923 murder conviction. An early master of controlling his own narrative in the media, Wood appealed to the North Carolina public as a misunderstood, clever antihero. In 1930, after a final jailbreak, police killed Wood in a shootout. The ballad bearing his name first appeared less than a year later.


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