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Cubic Coin

Flipped coin folds out to six-sided, decision facilitator.
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If you just have to decide whether to go to a movie or stay at home, tossing an ordinary coin would suffice. If on the other hand, you’re trying to make up your mind if you’ll go to a movie, post an idea, go to the pub, play with the kids, visit a gallery exhibit or wash your hair, only a cubic coin will do.

Made out of six, thin, aluminum alloy disks, this 5mm (0.2”) coin functions like other currency until its head is rotated 30 degrees counterclockwise. Then upon flipping the coin, the spring-loaded head opens on a tiny hinge to a right angle from the tail. From the head folds out a third disk and from it a fourth, etc. until the six sides ingeniously snap in place and interlock to build a hollow cube with circular sides.

Instead of heads or tails, the tossed coin lands on its head, tail, front, back, right or left side, helping you choose between two, three or six different things. Each side is also struck with one to six raised dots making the cubic coin a die. Two are all you need for a game of craps.

FarmerJohn, Oct 08 2002

The Diceman http://www.diceman.co.uk/
Its quite good. [[ sctld ], Oct 08 2002]


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Annotation:







       or you could use a dice
Gulherme, Oct 08 2002
  

       The Diceman
[ sctld ], Oct 08 2002
  

       [Gulherme] "a dice" is no dice
FarmerJohn, Oct 08 2002
  

       Yeah, it seemed so fantastic this morning. I'll have to flip a coin to see if it gets deleted or stays a couple of days or stays a week or ...
FarmerJohn, Oct 08 2002
  

       We know how to decide between any number of alternatives that are a power of 2 by repeated coin flips. To generalize to any number of alternatives, round up to the nearest power of two by adding dummy outcomes, and rerun the trial if a dummy wins.   

       So, for example, to select between 6 alteratives, select between 8 by flipping a coin 3 times; if the outcome is alternative #7 or #8, repeat the trial.
jutta, Oct 08 2002
  

       <humour> Is it possible, Jutta, that you're trying to say, "redundant"? </humour>
hollajam, Oct 08 2002
  


 

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