h a l f b a k e r yYour journey of inspiration and perplexement provides a certain dark frisson.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Lottery ticket sales are supposed to partially benefit education, so why not make them educational in and of themselves?
Here's what I mean. In a normal scratch-off ticket, you may get "cherry, cherry, palm tree". Another loser. But the items are arbitrary and don't match the relative commonness
of cherries and palm trees in real life. However, a periodic table lottery ticket [complete with picture of mad scientist pouring liquid from chemistry beakers on the front] would scratch off to reveal "Nitrogen ... Nitrogen ... Oxygen" - still a loser, but it teaches you something about the atmosphere we live in and what elements are the most common. A winner would be something like "Hydrogen ... Hydrogen ... Hydrogen" and you'd see how rare something like that is in the world. Bigger prize if you get "Argon ... Argon ... Argon" or the like. The probabilities for ultra rare cases may have to be tweaked to make the game winnable.
Any probability distribution that occurs in real life can be modeled as a lottery ticket. For example, ages of people in America, where an age over 100 is a grand prize winner but most of the ages are around 50-59. Or it could be Economic Status, where most of the tickets are like "Poor ... Lower Middle Class ... Lower Middle Class" and you win if you get three of something other than three poors. It would be designed so that you rarely even SEE a "Rich", let alone get three of them.
Thank you.
Abundance of elements in the Universe
http://en.wikipedia...nts_in_the_Universe Hydrogen Hydrogen Hydrogen [Inyuki, Mar 29 2011]
Someone else who claims to have found $10 on the footpath.
http://blakeheritag...chic-phenomenon.php [DrBob, Mar 30 2011]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Destination URL.
E.g., https://www.coffee.com/
Description (displayed with the short name and URL.)
|
|
I found a ten dollar note on a foot path yesterday, what are the chances of that happening? |
|
|
<scratching noise>"Francium
Hey!
Astatine
Wow, this could be great
Nitrogen - Damn!!" |
|
|
//I found a ten dollar note on a foot path yesterday, what
are the chances of that happening?// |
|
|
50:50. Either it happens, or it doesn't. |
|
|
Actually, thinking about it, it happened so the chances are
100% |
|
|
Right, I've caught someone with that in casual conversation too. I meant likelihood. |
|
|
I would guess that $10 notes are found on footpaths somewhere every day so the chances seem quite high. |
|
|
Well, my extensive research on Google reveals that other people also claim to have found $10 notes on the footpath. However, the top hit for '$10 notes found on footpath' takes me to a website which claims that people called 'Blake' have strange mental powers. So, for me, this calls into doubt both the credibility of anyone who claims to have found $10 on the footpath and also that of anyone who claims that $10 notes even exist.
It's bizarre stuff like this that keeps me constantly amused. Hoorah for the 'bakery! |
|
|
I was going to say 'ten dollar bill' instead, but decided on the more universal 'note' in anticipation of remarks about having to pay it off, what kind of bird it was from etc. |
|
|
There's a song about a ten dollar bill. I wish I could find that song. |
|
|
//Any probability distribution that occurs in real life can be modeled as a lottery ticket.// It is called insurance. |
|
| |