Pi Day and an Interview With a Pi Researcher
JoshuaInNippon writes "In honor of Pi Day, March 14 (or 3.14 for those who may need a hint), readers may be interested in reading an interview with Professor Daisuke Takahashi, the Japanese researcher who found 2.5 trillion digits of Pi back in August, before being apparently being edged out in December by a French computer programmer looking to prove his efficient coding abilities. Professor Takahashi's interview gives some unique insight into one man who truly marvels at the number that has driven people to ever greater lengths to find more digits for centuries."
Plant Kingdom adds "There have been a number of proposals for alternatives to March 14 (see the Wikipedia page for Pi Day). Here's mine: when the Earth has gone through 1/pi-th of its orbit, as measured from Winter Solstice to Winter Solstice. I've put together a web site to make the case."
Calling Fabrice Bellard "a French computer programmer"? Is it a joke?
1/pi is not pi. It's like celebrating the third time something happened by doing something one third of the way through and then stopping!
"When a circle's diameter is one unit, then the cirmcumference is pi units." [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi]
So if a year is "one unit", we should celebrate pi every 3.14 years or something.
I understand that in the book "Contact" by Carl Sagan, when the scientists meets the aliens he asks them a question:
Scientist: Do you believe in God?
Aliens: Yes.
(Astonished) Scientist: Really?! Why?
Aliens: We have proof.
Scientist: Proof?!!!
Alien: Yes, when we decoded Pi to (a very large number) we found a Message...
Of course this idea was exploited in a different way by the movie "Pi". (Sorry didn't see it either.). In any case, if Pi is truly Random (it is isn't it?) won't every possible message occur? Just like those monkeys with their typewriters (if you don't know what a typewriter is look it up).
The month-day-year system is probably the lease sensible method of the lot.
Not to those of us who often work with dates that often land on the next month. As a friend of mine likes to say "six of one, half dozen of the other."
The sanest way to do it would be year-month-day...
This gets my vote.
"I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)
Yup, yyyy-mm-dd is the ISO standard date format for a reason. You get the advantage of easier chronological sorting (ala the US system of month/day), and the unambiguity of the unit size constantly going in one direct (in this case, largest to smallest).