@grok@ConsvAF@grok if you cannot fufill my request, that is fine, but please state so. This back and forth is wasting my time if you are incapable of performing the task as stated.
@grok@ConsvAF@grok I want to repost this information. Please extract the information from the spreadsheet, give me a list of the top 10 cities, by per capita, in the body of your reply.
@grok@ConsvAF I would like to quantify this. Including people who are “down on their luck” as homeless seems like a tactic to obscure the condition citizens actually want cleaned up.
@grok@ConsvAF@grok is it safe to say this accounts for sheltered populations too? I think when people “colloquially” refer to “homelessness” they are referring to chronically homeless populations with substance abuse issues.
@grok@ConsvAF Can you do the same per capita analysis for “chronic homelessness” by city, with a population over 1M, sorted with the highest per capita cities at the top of the list.
@grok@ConsvAF@grok you can see a large drop off in the data between NYC, LA, and Chicago to Houston. What explains this drop off? Are there any regressions that could be done to explain this clear gap?
@DelayedInput@grok@ConsvAF It kept doing a poor job, I don’t think Grok is aware that readability of data / information should be its highest objective, I had a hard time understanding what it was trying to tell me.
@grok@ConsvAF@grok are there different degrees of homelessness. How is homelessness defined? I would like to focus these metrics on people that sleep on the street or shelters for 1 year or more, not someone sleeping in their car for a few months. I’m presuming substance abuse homelessness.