Reminder: Only a few days left for this! Submissions are closed on September 1st.
Reminder: Only a few days left for this! Submissions are closed on September 1st.
I'm unsure from this post what the prize criteria are. Like, 'the judges will be assessing based on which entries are the most <what?>'
"We’ll select winners for their importance, novelty, and presentation."
So for me this would be the most hardcore, interesting, valuable or impressive.

The team at QURI has recently released Squiggle, a very new and experimental programming language for probabilistic estimation. We’re curious about what promising use cases it could enable, and we are launching a prize to incentivize people to find this out.
We offer a $600 first-place prize, a $300 second-place prize, and a $100 third-place prize. The prize will be paid for by the Quantified Uncertainty Research Institute (QURI).
To enter, first make a public post online between now and September 1, 2022. We encourage you to either post directly or make a link post to either the EA Forum or to LessWrong. Second, complete this form, also before September 1, 2022.
We’ll aim to make decisions by October 1, 2022.
More specifically:
If you’d like feedback or would like to discuss possible projects, please reach out! (via direct message or email.) We’ll invite you to our Slack and can give feedback and advice. Also, feel free to file issues or comments/questions/suggestions on the Squiggle Github page.
The judges will be Nuño Sempere, Ozzie Gooen, and Quinn Dougherty. The rest of the Squiggle team will also consult. We’ll select winners for their importance, novelty, and presentation.
Some ideas, any of which could be taken from the recent post:
Software Ideas
Research Ideas
Some existing tools that use Squiggle (for inspiration)
I think the link should go to https://recursing.github.io/guesstimate_to_squiggle/
Disclaimer: it's very MVP, needs manual tweaking for many models
Sorry, fixed!