Number lookup website and watches
Dec. 13th, 2005 01:44 pm1. If I get annoyed by wearing something round my wrist, but would like a watch, are there any suggestions? Be retro and get a fob watch? At least I can do "spectacles testacles[1] wallet and watch[2]" crossing-myself[3]s then.
2. I seem to recall a website which did a reverse lookup on arbitrary numbers. So, would take a decimal[4], and say "pi^2" or "foo's constant" or "simple integral of expression". Did I imagine this? I can't find it.
3. How should I have titled this? Something about clock arithmetic[5]?
[1] Nuns on the Run is a good contender for "Film that should have been really awful, but was actually very funny." Though I think the ultimate winner was Pirates of the Caribean (potentially vulnerable to Pirates II).
[2] For the record, it's left then right, though the eastern orthodox do it the other way, and I can't believe any God most people worship would mind so long as it's sincere.
[3] Is there a word that means that? That looks clumsy?
[4] That is, a number typically specified to a largish but finite degree of precision. Not necessarily in base 10. Though it would be.
[5] I assumed everyone had heard of it, but teaching modular arithmatic made me realise apparently not. Clock arithmetic is like "11+2=1" and "12=0".
2. I seem to recall a website which did a reverse lookup on arbitrary numbers. So, would take a decimal[4], and say "pi^2" or "foo's constant" or "simple integral of expression". Did I imagine this? I can't find it.
3. How should I have titled this? Something about clock arithmetic[5]?
[1] Nuns on the Run is a good contender for "Film that should have been really awful, but was actually very funny." Though I think the ultimate winner was Pirates of the Caribean (potentially vulnerable to Pirates II).
[2] For the record, it's left then right, though the eastern orthodox do it the other way, and I can't believe any God most people worship would mind so long as it's sincere.
[3] Is there a word that means that? That looks clumsy?
[4] That is, a number typically specified to a largish but finite degree of precision. Not necessarily in base 10. Though it would be.
[5] I assumed everyone had heard of it, but teaching modular arithmatic made me realise apparently not. Clock arithmetic is like "11+2=1" and "12=0".
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:00 pm (UTC)I often use my cellphone as a watch. Wall clocks and computers of course will tell you the time. And you can practice getting good at reading watches off other people's wrists without them noticing.
[3] autocrucifixion? Maybe not.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:16 pm (UTC)Often it's pleasent to be without a watch, it feels freeing to not worry about time. But normally I do need to be somewhere else. I may have the self-control to divest myself when I need to.
[3] LOL.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:10 pm (UTC)(S)
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 03:36 pm (UTC)(S)
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 03:41 pm (UTC)Thank you!
is the badger.
ROFL.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:33 pm (UTC)I made the strap in 1998 (it was the first thing I'd ever sewn, so I'm quite pleased that it's survived seven years and is still going strong) and haven't had occasion to regret it since. Not wearing my watch on my wrist means I don't have to take it off to wash up and suchlike, and the absence of pressure round my wrist seems to have helped my RSI too.
I'm not offering to make more straps like it (although I may have to replace my own one of these days), but if this idea sounds interesting to you then I'll be happy to show you the thing in more detail and discuss tips for making one.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:55 pm (UTC)I used to have one that dangled around my neck, on a sort of plastic string - tendency to catch in things meant the flimsy chain things were a bad idea.
2. I think google would do the first two ...
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 03:00 pm (UTC)2. It doesn't seem to. That is, it knows pi^2 is 9.8696044, but not that 9.8696044 is pi^2 afaict.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 03:13 pm (UTC)oh, I see. but surely an arbitrary number could be many things?
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 03:19 pm (UTC)Yes, it could, which is one thing that made me think I may have imagined it. But regardless of what you can prove, most of the time, if someone has such a number, they will want the answer from the most used equation or whatever.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 08:44 pm (UTC)too far away to see maybe it has a clear face
at the wrong angle doesn't seem to be
I guess, but how would you work that out? what if there are two good equations leading to the same number?
no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 01:50 am (UTC)Well, as I say, maybe I did imagine this. Presumably you'd actually have to have a big database of common polynomials of common constants? I can't think of any way of narrowing things down.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 02:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 02:29 pm (UTC)Intuitively, almost anyone dealing with 1.41421 will mean sqrt(2), or at worst two different interesting numbers will be coincidently close, but it doesn't feel right.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 03:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-14 03:55 pm (UTC)The bit that may or may not exist it decimal numbers.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 02:58 pm (UTC)