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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!doc.ic.ac.uk!uknet!qmw-dcs!arodgers
- From: arodgers@dcs.qmw.ac.uk (Angus H Rodgers)
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Subject: Re: Negative Zero
- Keywords: -0
- Message-ID: <1992Dec19.180601.18870@dcs.qmw.ac.uk>
- Date: 19 Dec 92 18:06:01 GMT
- References: <1992Dec12.010711.15778@leela.cs.orst.edu> <1992Dec15.174003.203407@uctvax.uct.ac.za>
- Sender: usenet@dcs.qmw.ac.uk (Usenet News System)
- Organization: Computer Science Dept, QMW, University of London
- Lines: 38
- Nntp-Posting-Host: io.dcs.qmw.ac.uk
-
- In <1992Dec15.174003.203407@uctvax.uct.ac.za>
- naturman@uctvax.uct.ac.za writes:
-
- >In article <1992Dec12.010711.15778@leela.cs.orst.edu>, jeremy@atlantis.CS.ORST.EDU ((-| Jeremy |-) Smith) writes:
- >>
- >> Some guy in Southern California proposed a method of naming multiples
- >> of ten which included a `logical' system for naming very large numbers
- >> (the largest being milli-decilli-fiveillionillion).
- >> [...]
-
- >All this reminds me of a student I encountered once who had written a program
- >to check whether infinity existed. He was incrementing and printing out a
- >counter in a continuous loop and sat looking at the screen enthusiastically.
- >Shame.
-
- On "The Best of the Worst" (an occasionally slightly amusing American TV
- show), they invited into the studio a man with a very, very unusual hobby.
- His great aim in life is to count up to 1 billion -- using a printing desk
- calculator, by starting at 0.0, and adding 1.0 again and again and ...
-
- He'd been doing this for 10 years. They'd had him on the show 3 years before,
- and he'd been such a great hit with the viewers that they invited him back to
- see how he was getting on. Sitting at a desk in the studio, surrounded by
- buxom lovelies, and by rolls and rolls of calculator paper, he added 1.0, and
- added 1.0, and kept on adding 1.0, until (the highlight of the show) his
- current total, displayed in bright lights, changed from (I think) 3,539,999
- to 3,540,000; whereupon a band struck up a tune and marched through the studio.
-
- It's a good thing he picked a billion. If the number was small enough for
- him ever to reach it in this way, I suspect that his life would lose all
- meaning.
-
- He had a really nice goofy smile.
- --
- Gus Rodgers, Dept. of Computer Science, |
- Queen Mary & Westfield College, Mile End |
- Road, London, England. +44 71 975 5241 |
- E-mail (JANET): arodgers@dcs.qmw.ac.uk | Post in haste, repent at leisure.
-