Pi Recited to 100,000 Digits 335
DiAmOnDirc writes "Akira Haraguchi, 60, needed more than 16 hours to recite the number to 100,000 decimal places, breaking his personal best of 83,431 digits set in 1995, his office said Wednesday. He made the attempt at a public hall in Kisarazu, just east of Tokyo. Haraguchi, a psychiatric counselor and business consultant in nearby Mobara city, took a break of about 5 minutes every one to two hours, going to the rest room and eating rice balls during the attempt, said Naoki Fujii, spokesman of Haraguchi's office. Fujii said all of Haraguchi's activities during the attempt, including his bathroom breaks, were videotaped for evidence that will later be sent for verification by the Guinness Book of Records."
Details (Score:5, Interesting)
a) He's got a way to go; and
b) Sagan not proven right yet, still no circle.
I'm guessing there's no girlfriend, either, but the only evidence I have supporting this is that, well, this guy memorized 100,000 digits of Pi. C'mon...
Re:White and Nerdy... (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xEzGIuY7kw [youtube.com]
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Answer: Guess I'm no longer a geek
Re:Details (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah... I just love the guy posting on Slashdot about his assumption of some other guy not having a gf because of how he spends his time.
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Maybe we should do poll on the marital status/relationship status of Slashdot?
Phil
Re:Details (Score:5, Funny)
Mod this FUNNY! (Score:2)
Phil
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Re:Details (Score:5, Funny)
So, you're saying that he probably does have a girlfriend?
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You could "infer" it from the meaning of the word "recite". [bartleby.com]
recite. To repeat or utter aloud (something rehearsed or memorized).
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Technically, since Pi is infinitely long and never repeats, any finite series of digits must appear at some point. The first 100 million digits of Pi, for example, contain most every 7-digit phone number. Of course, the longer the string you want to find, the further you have to go. But that's not really a problem.
Re:Details (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry that's a non sequitur. There are series which are (a) infinitely long and (b) non-repetitive but which nevertheless do not contain any possible (finite) sequence of digits, just consider the series 1 0 11 0 111 0 1111 0 11111 - look no repetition Ma but the subsequence '1337' (for example) does not appear anywhere.
Re:Details (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't think that's true. Counter example: consider the stream of digits comprised of pi with all 7's removed. Still infinitely long and never repeating, but 7 never appears now.
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Actually, did they analyze the result for this? analyzing pi for hidden messages is harder than just calculating it. There certainly is a cicle hidden in pi, the question is if you find it earlier than randomnees would predict.
Re:Details (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Details (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Details (Score:5, Insightful)
Consider that "intelligence" can be (mis)measured in many different ways. The classic measure is an IQ test, which arguably does measure one's depths of reasoning in various ways, but at the end of the day, an IQ test really just measures how good one is at doing IQ tests. There are other kinds of "intelligence". For example, Wayne Gretzky might score modestly on an IQ test, but on a hockey rink, he was a "genius" in terms of psychomotor skills.
As other respondents have said, Haraguchi probably looks for patterns in the digits that he can associate with other memorable concepts, perhaps visual or aural, or both. I would argue that such an ability is indeed a form of intelligence, insofar as it does involve a higher form of mental activity -- a kind of "abstraction" of the perceived patterns of the digits into aggregates that are available for him to recall. I think it's similar to the kind of intelligence that a musician needs to memorize a piece of music.
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Another example, some might have thought Earl was stumbling mindlessly drunk at the party last night, but had they looked closer they would have noticed that his intricatly placed footsteps were actually a plot of the first 18,000 coordinates of the Tau Dirichlet Series.
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Then it's more of an endurance test that a memory test.
Not to take anything away from the accomplishment, mind.
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You try remembering 100k digits when you get to his age.
You try remembering 1k digits right now.
no problem. i have the first 100K digits memorized already... 1,2,3,4,5,6,7...The name for that kind of chanting (Score:5, Funny)
since this is pi we're talking about (Score:2)
Pi is like so last year (Score:5, Funny)
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100,000 digits is nothing... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:100,000 digits is nothing... (Score:5, Funny)
Good luck with 3/4.
It's twice as long!
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Better than e! (Score:5, Funny)
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I know pi to 100K places (Score:5, Funny)
Weird Al's got nothing on this dude.
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This is coming out as a DVD box set (Score:2, Funny)
Rice (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder how many digits of pi can be squeezed onto a piece of rice.
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He's using memory technique (Score:4, Interesting)
It's been talked about on slashdot before using some memorization technique association groups of numbers with memorable patterns.
Don't ask me for links.
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Re:He's using memory technique (Score:5, Informative)
More specifically, he memorizes the digits by making a story, probably from the sound of the numbers.
In Japanese, you can make a play on words by the sound of the numbers called goro-awase. For example, if there is a sequence of numbers such as "3341", it can be read as "sa-mi-shi-i" which means "sad". By having a series of these play on words, he can make up a story, which is much easier to remember than a sequence of numbers.
If you're curious, here [asahi.com] is the article (in Japanese) that mentions that the guy makes a story to memorize the digits.
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He developed his own method, whereby each digit was assigned to a row of hiragana (e.g. 1 = anything from the ka line, 2 = anything from the sa-line, etc.) and built up a memorizable string of words using those sounds.
Still means he had to memorize a 100,000 syllable story, though.
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Re:He's using memory technique (Score:4, Interesting)
I imagine that this guy was probably using a more specialized mneumonic, like the Raven poem linked to by the guy above, but as the Wikipedia link mentions, many of those who perform great feats of memory do still use this. Let's admit it though: there is no extant trick which would make memorizing 100,000 digits EASY.
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Has anyone recited the Bible word for word by memory?
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Of course... (Score:2, Interesting)
So I guess being able to recite pi to the 100,000 digit is just further evidence that he's crazy.
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Do you know... (Score:3, Funny)
Bruce
Wow oh wow... (Score:2)
That's very impressive... (Score:2)
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Great, now i'm thinking of Thomas the Tank Engine, who is a really usefull engine.
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That seems an undue slap at GP. He never claimed that everything that he did was useful. He simply noted that, due to technological changes, some skills are not of much use any more. And he's right.
Re:That's very impressive... (Score:4, Interesting)
Sure, in the days of hunting/gathering, it was a vital skill. Transportation, for me, is a means to an end, but if you have no place to go, why even bother with it at all?
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At 60! (Score:2, Insightful)
Doh! (Score:2)
Easy way to remember pi to 8 decimal places (Score:5, Interesting)
But it's all those digits (decimal places) that follows the 3 that we all have trouble remembering, right?
So okay. Just memorize the following simple phrase:
"I wish I could recollect pi easily today"
The number of letters in each word are the first 8 decimal digits:
1 4 1 5 9 2 6 5
Thus PI is approximately: 3.14159265...
Which should be <i>plenty</i> long enough for most calculations.
The only hard part of course is remembering to use the word "recollect" instead of "remember".
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>>> import math
>>> math.pi
3.1415926535897931
Might want to file a bug report on that one. It's 3.1415926535897932...
A public performance? (Score:5, Funny)
Did people actually go to watch this guy? What did they say to each other when he finished?
"Hey, remember the part when he was all like 3, 5, 1, 7, 4, 4, 2, 5, 6, 6, 2, 1, 0, 4, 5, 7? That was wicked sick"
"Yea, yea, and then he followed it up with a 4, 2, 4, 7, 3, 1, 1, 5, 2, 2, 5, 9, 0, 2, 3 and I was like ROCK ON Akira, ROCK ON"
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Probably also the sleep deprivation...
crazy psychiatrists (Score:2)
Hrm, e. (Score:3, Funny)
Really slow news day? (Score:2)
Must be a slow day at Slashdot.
can someone explain this to me? (Score:2)
Are regular people capable of memorizing a sequence like that?
I can't even remember what kind of pie i had for dessert last weekend. Da Dum, DING! I can't even remember why the hell I started reading this stupid Slashdot rag. haha!
Uncanny (Score:2)
Obligatory (Score:2, Funny)
Forget it's pi.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Forget it's pi....(phbbbt) (Score:3, Funny)
I can recite whole numbers from 0 to 100,000. Maybe more. Does that impress you?
to paraphrase a great mind... (Score:2)
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You missed something (Score:2)
Oh ye fricking gods... (Score:2)
Has humanity sunk so low that this gets listed as an achievement?
I mean, come on now. I'm a nerd, a geek, asocial...
BUT DAMMIT PEOPLE! Please stop proving the jocks right.
22/7 (Score:2)
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Re:22/7 (Score:5, Informative)
It's not that accurate: 355/133 = 2.66917... . I think maybe you meant 355/113.
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Just 1 digit more accuracy ... how about 3 or 4 (Score:5, Interesting)
OK, so you really meant 355/113. The value of that fraction is actually accurate to 7 digits, which is 1 digit more than how it is expressed in whole fraction form. But if you look further, you can find a fraction that has an accuracy that is 3 digits more than the total number of digits in the fraction. That fraction is (with digits chopped so it doesn't get mangled in Slashdot HTML):
1901870728 5669230760 9014394471 4770339621 5907683135 4633719252 6115562704 3396809635 6432000780 8107929370 2997523451 8768883574 1387003036 8533612856 7115805986 7702399073 2279944269 0522019469 9766118756 0590556190 3648850292 8002591
... divided by ...
6053842551 4642032610 2361023215 9405317163 9147815034 5020739231 2531721347 4068823247 6946000058 7137745497 9656144746 8267746412 8740227175 4410094658 7144148739 6268034351 3347328160 6663121381 1257617460 3015134435 3855924025 288111
That's 217 numerator digits and 216 denominator digits for a total of 433 digits that gives PI to 436 digits. It doesn't get any better until a fraction with 14593 digits in both numerator and denominator for a total of 29186 digits that gives PI to an accuracy of 29190 digits, 4 more digits than in the fraction.
But 355/113 is easier to remember and 355/133 is apparently easier to type :-)
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```____
113)355
Humans are much better at remembering patterns than they are sequences of random numbers.
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easy (Score:2)
wait a minute....
Re:Good Manners (Score:5, Funny)
OK, OK, I'm leaving, no need to shove....
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Brief unofficial translation of newspaper (Score:3, Informative)
"Using equivilence rules like 3 = sa [n.b. all numbers in Japanese have a variety of syllables which they can be read as -- thus, you can remember a phone number as roughly a two to three word phrase, like my bank being 555-GOT-
Corrections (Score:2)
His previous record was set last July.
He commented, "It's good that I was able to do it relaxed." (This is unambiguous.)
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alt.binaries.pictures.fetish.scat
Re:Videotaped? (Score:5, Funny)
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http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=337 0 [chessbase.com]
World Champion and Grandmaster Kramnik alegedly goes 50 times during 1 game...
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Bodily functions in Japan -- and indeed, most of the world outside North America -- are not considered dirty or taboo. Here in Japan, they have co-ed washrooms in a lot of places. Even the more modern segregated washrooms are often laid out so anyone can see you taking a whiz when they walk past the door. It's not at all unusual for the cleaning lady to come in and start cleaning the urinal next to you.
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Why would you inefficiently store it as characters? Store it as binary and you can fit WAAAY more digits into that space.
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