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radiojake wrote:As humans, when we come across random clusters we naturally superimpose a pattern. We instinctively project an order on the chaos. It's a part of our psychological make-up. For example, when the iPod first came out and people started to use the shuffle feature, which plays songs in a random order, many people complained that it didn't work. They said that too often songs from the same album, or the same artist, came up one after another. Yet that's what randomness does - it creates counter-intuitively dense clusters. In response to complaints from users, Apple CEO Stever Jobs changed the programming behind the feature: "We're making it [the shuffle] less random to make it feel more random."
TheSaxlad wrote:The Dice suck a lot of the time.
And if they dont suck then they blow.
Jatekos wrote:http://lmgtfy.com/?q=%22The+other+will+imagine+flipping+a+coin+30+times%22
Robinette wrote:Kaskavel wrote:Seriously. Who is the female conqueror of CC?
Depends on what metric you use...
The coolest is squishyg
Jatekos wrote:http://lmgtfy.com/?q=%22The+other+will+imagine+flipping+a+coin+30+times%22
pamoa wrote:well nothing is ever random
flipping a coin is about physics law and the initial amount of energy you give to it
Mr_Adams wrote:pamoa wrote:well nothing is ever random
flipping a coin is about physics law and the initial amount of energy you give to it
flipping a quarter, you get about 50.7% heads because of the distribution of weight in the pressed faces, for example.![]()
Also, keeping with the perfect randomness, and proof I did for myself on the concept given in the thread, I confirmed the idea that you should get a run of 5 in 30 flips. The probability of getting 5 in a row is 1 in 16. there are 25 sets of 5 between 1 and 30, so you should in fact get the set of 5. you have a good chance of getting 6 in a row for that matter (1 in 32 given 25 opportunities). Another example is if you get a group of any larger than 14, you have over a 15% chance of having 2 people with the same birth date.
rdsrds2120 wrote:Mr_Adams wrote:pamoa wrote:well nothing is ever random
flipping a coin is about physics law and the initial amount of energy you give to it
flipping a quarter, you get about 50.7% heads because of the distribution of weight in the pressed faces, for example.![]()
Also, keeping with the perfect randomness, and proof I did for myself on the concept given in the thread, I confirmed the idea that you should get a run of 5 in 30 flips. The probability of getting 5 in a row is 1 in 16. there are 25 sets of 5 between 1 and 30, so you should in fact get the set of 5. you have a good chance of getting 6 in a row for that matter (1 in 32 given 25 opportunities). Another example is if you get a group of any larger than 14, you have over a 15% chance of having 2 people with the same birth date.
To the year or the day? Either way, now I know that coins are not random. Good thing we use di-- erm, Intensity Cubes!
-rd
rdsrds2120 wrote:Mr_Adams wrote:pamoa wrote:well nothing is ever random
flipping a coin is about physics law and the initial amount of energy you give to it
flipping a quarter, you get about 50.7% heads because of the distribution of weight in the pressed faces, for example.![]()
Also, keeping with the perfect randomness, and proof I did for myself on the concept given in the thread, I confirmed the idea that you should get a run of 5 in 30 flips. The probability of getting 5 in a row is 1 in 16. there are 25 sets of 5 between 1 and 30, so you should in fact get the set of 5. you have a good chance of getting 6 in a row for that matter (1 in 32 given 25 opportunities). Another example is if you get a group of any larger than 14, you have over a 15% chance of having 2 people with the same birth date.
To the year or the day?
rdsrds2120 wrote:Mr_Adams wrote:pamoa wrote:well nothing is ever random
flipping a coin is about physics law and the initial amount of energy you give to it
flipping a quarter, you get about 50.7% heads because of the distribution of weight in the pressed faces, for example.![]()
Also, keeping with the perfect randomness, and proof I did for myself on the concept given in the thread, I confirmed the idea that you should get a run of 5 in 30 flips. The probability of getting 5 in a row is 1 in 16. there are 25 sets of 5 between 1 and 30, so you should in fact get the set of 5. you have a good chance of getting 6 in a row for that matter (1 in 32 given 25 opportunities). Another example is if you get a group of any larger than 14, you have over a 15% chance of having 2 people with the same birth date.
To the year or the day? Either way, now I know that coins are not random. Good thing we use di-- erm, Intensity Cubes!
-rd
radiojake wrote:Here's a party trick...
sonicsteve wrote:radiojake wrote:Here's a party trick...
Party trick, eh?
Excellent post and article and all that, but if I'm at a party and someone suggests I start writing down random coin tosses as a fun activity, then I'm leaving to look for the party with the wine and the ping pong balls.
sonicsteve wrote:radiojake wrote:Here's a party trick...
Party trick, eh?
Excellent post and article and all that, but if I'm at a party and someone suggests I start writing down random coin tosses as a fun activity, then I'm leaving to look for the party with the wine and the ping pong balls.
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