Somehow "Pittsburgh" doesn't turn up in a text search of the document, but it is listed as 86th on the list. I don't know why a text search misses it.
OT - Statistics fun but we're left out
Ok, we'll ignore the fact that they defined "smart" as formal degrees + income. But they claim they included the 200 largest metro areas. Apparently, this includes Burlington, Vermont at 207,600 but not Pittsburgh at (wikipedia sourced) 311,647 [city, or 2,462,571 metro].
By my numbers, Burlington should get off the list and Pittsburgh should be on it (undoubtedly among others). Did I miss something? Or do we not count? I couldn't find a place to point out there error without signing up for some social media nonsense. So I figured I'd fume here, where the two other statistics geeks could sympathize
Statistics, nothin. "We took a number, divided it by another number, multiplied it by another number, chopped them all up into bits and dropped them in a blender with some unlabeled things we found in the spice cabinet, and left it on the counter overnight. In the morning, we cooked it. Here Mom, taste it!"
d'oh, thank you Mick! Funny it's just above Binghamton, NY. Guy who sits next to me is from there.
I always figured we weren't as overeducated as some people claim.
but Lyle, when you do that 200 times, that's a statistic!
They used some dumb unicode symbol for the double tt in Pitt. If you search for "PiRsburgh" (or just "burgh") it finds it.
I don't know what was wrong with ASCII anyway. A couple more years and even the Chinese would have switched to English.