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#265 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000877150418
http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000877152045 Could someone perhaps give the first one a try? If so, I could have the rest of it by and letting it go, it became a quite large one here. Total factoring time = 75514.6610 seconds I have not checked any further yet. Thanks! Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2016-10-16 at 10:29 |
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#266 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
It became a PRP824 added to my list right now.
It will be uploaded together with the rest of it when the moment for this become the right one. Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2016-10-23 at 12:39 |
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#267 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
Back up again after having the computer fixed in my living room because of an undervolt problem.
Continuing with the upload of some factors, I came across something slightly better. Returning back to the factorizations, I ended up with a P151 as the result. Next, when testing from that 309 digit number, it has factor P1 = 2 in between, next a P157. Doing it the opposite way, it once again has factor P1 = 2, next the P151. Edit: http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000879523542 http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000879523719 http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000879523727 Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2016-10-30 at 20:21 |
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#268 |
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Feb 2013
7128 Posts |
(3042376^32768+1)
Not prime (meaning composite). |
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#269 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
Also two factors being noted down today with P3 = 349 in between today, both ways.
The larger factor was a P186, while the smaller was a P120, after checking. Better continue with this until I have the final answer. |
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#270 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
For dummies.
https://boinc.berkeley.edu/dev/forum...id=73788#73788 If it is still there. You never know. See you tomorrow. Together with the rest of the numbers. Hopefully not forgetting the smoking cigar or cigarette either. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLFqeXm_5X4 Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2016-11-05 at 09:16 |
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#271 | ||
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"Serge"
Mar 2008
Phi(4,2^7658614+1)/2
36·13 Posts |
Quote:
And keeps telling you more or less the same thing: Quote:
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#272 |
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Feb 2013
7128 Posts |
Came across this.
http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000881039353 http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000881042866 Adding P8 = 23727779 and next the P12 at both places. The P14 was already known. Here it factorizes into a P47 and a PRP122, next becoming a P122 when it comes to the second link. It become that I ended up adding the flip-around in the second link first, but here I do not have the similar thing yet. Manually trial dividing, it becomes the same P47 and next a P102 when it comes to the first link. Total factoring time = 136928.3109 seconds I guess it will be about the same factoring time here if next waiting for it to finish up. I may add the P47 where it was found, but perhaps it should be better to wait for the first one there. Always the flip-around. Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2016-11-07 at 23:41 |
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#273 |
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Feb 2013
2·229 Posts |
http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000715844422
http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000633991051 http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000664615087 At the end there. I do not have the rest of it, by the way. http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000822445183 No problem here or with this one as well, because I guess it became known. If you did not already know in the middle of the night. Guess there could be a couple more of these as well. The problem is that most of my 200+ digit factors and quite many of them still lies around here and my stuck hand or hands made doing this a bit more difficult or problematic. Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2016-11-13 at 04:58 |
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#274 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000226834094
RSA-1024. What if told you so? Edit: Checking, it actually does not so this time either. But only when multiplying each factor I got with each other. When dividing both factors each way from RSA-1024, I get both factors when doing it each way. So here not necessarily only Yafu's failure of dividing, but perhaps something else. Getting back to it when I have it, because I am probably quite close. The first and smallest factor ends with "7". The second factor ends with "9". Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2016-11-16 at 04:54 |
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#275 |
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Aug 2006
3×1,993 Posts |
I don't think I'd believe it, given your track record so far.
![]() If you know enough of the final digits of a factor, you can use Coppersmith's algorithm to find it. |
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