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#78 |
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May 2013
East. Always East.
11×157 Posts |
I should clarify for anyone who might be wondering about this, go back a few pages and find LaurV's explanation which is fairly good. In this case, the bot is parsing the various replies for specific words (in this case "new Fermat Factors") and constructed something that your average monkey might mistake for a valuable response.
The bot is lame so it fails to understand any meaning whatsoever from the sentence. It picked up "new Fermat Factors" from a sentence whose meaning was almost unaffected by those three words. Because Batalov's reply was otherwise completely unrelated to the specific topic, there was nothing else within the bot's scope, so it built an entire reply off those three words, and the result is some unrelated gibberish. On top of that, failing to use our own built-in quote function (and earlier suggesting that we swap the "Submit Reply" and "Preview Post" buttons because it would be more convenient for it if they were reversed) shows that we are dealing with something that can't think. (I guess we can't rule out a particularly stupid human being, then) Last fiddled with by TheMawn on 2014-11-25 at 23:02 |
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#79 | |
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Aug 2006
3·1,993 Posts |
Quote:
I was sort of hoping that Silverman would have put his 2 cents in. It's entirely possible that there is no special form, but I'd be more inclined to believe it if he said so. |
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#80 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
Getting this result tonight.
If you try dividing this number: http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000731307790 The C1057 at the end there: BTW: Not the C1133 which is the composite remainder of 2^4096, but a similar, slightly smaller number. http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000731307941 with this number (which is a C225) http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000731295787 you will be able to get this PRP829 as a result. http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000731295787 BTW, the query lines becomes a little long, so I am using the shorter syntaxes available for this instead. The problem here is that this C225 is really a hard one to factorize. It probably has only some 2 factors rather than 3 or 4. Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2014-11-26 at 07:21 |
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#81 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
Thanks!
So, if you don't mind, a question for you. In which way are you supposed to find the "next" prime in a (logical) sequence. Take this link as an example. http://factordb.com/index.php?query=2%5E1024%2B1 Assume that I only happened to know about the three smallest factors, but not the largest one,being present here. In which way am I able to possibly be able to find or locate this "next" prime? Not all sequences are that logical. There may be a mix of even factors when it comes to size. In other cases there may only be one or more small ones and perhaps a large one. Nothing in between. Still such a number may become fully factored at times. Thanks for any answers! Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2014-11-26 at 11:09 |
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#82 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
326910 Posts |
Quote:
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#83 |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2×3×1,693 Posts |
I am amazed that this thread has stretched out for so many pages.
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#84 |
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Feb 2013
2×229 Posts |
This could possibly be added under "More information" for
http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000720533470 is a factor of http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000716659482 Please see http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000716666264 for this. - - - Also this: http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000731322732 apparently is having factor http://factordb.com/index.php?showid...00000731320815 This factor is only a couple of hours old, by the way. Result listed at: http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000731295787 Thanks! Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2014-11-26 at 12:41 |
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#85 |
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Undefined
"The unspeakable one"
Jun 2006
My evil lair
22·1,549 Posts |
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#86 |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
7×1,373 Posts |
About 10 years ago I was playing some board games on a gaming site. There was a girl there who almost could sustain any conversation, play reasonable 3 or 4 different games (like gomoku, reversi, etc), participate in ad-hoc competitions, post on the forums (and edit her own posts too!). She was quite popular on the site and everybody knew her. We also learned she was a bot. The only reason we learned she was a bot, was because the author said so. Suspicion arose from the fact that she was doing the same mistakes in the games for ever and ever (her play was not randomized, she was there to talk, not to play!), and some people used her to increase their ratings on the site (playing and winning against her the same game, few times a day or so in a row). She also used to talk in 50 chat rooms (game boards) in the same time, or play 10 games simultaneously, which was really strange! And suspicious!
The author of the girl sold the site for good money (and now you can only play poker and rummy and stupid games on it!) and then worked for google for a while (and "she" was one of the reasons why google took him, beside of other many nice things he did), till he found a better life for himself. We used to be friends once...[edit: this is not to say that you are far behind of what the bots can do today, sorry if you feel so, but just imagine this was 10 years ago! ]
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2014-11-27 at 02:43 |
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#87 |
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Feb 2013
1110010102 Posts |
Is factorization meant to be just a tool, or are you ever supposed to be able to think yourself and possibly be able to
make up your mind? Have a look at this number and its corresponding factorization. http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000647335885 This number, having the remaining composite part http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000647336006 in fact divides this number http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000017377290 giving me this composite number as the result. http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000643754575 So to me, this number has really become fully factorized. The remaining factor in between when it comes to these Fermat numbers is http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1100000000017315243 Really, for now the largest Fermat factors typically are not part of a given factorization. At least it does not show up there right now in the Factor Database. These numbers eventually becomes part of even larger number structures. For example http://factordb.com/index.php?id=1000000000012172552 Trying out this one right now. Therefore, several other similar examples should exist among these composite numbers. For now the only option is to try dividing a given composite number with one of these numbers and then multiply the answer you get the opposite way in order to see whether it matches the number you started dividing from. Last fiddled with by storflyt32 on 2014-11-30 at 04:51 |
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#88 | ||
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6809 > 6502
"""""""""""""""""""
Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
100110001110002 Posts |
Quote:
![]() That and the evident lack of self-defense. Let's test this hypothesis: Quote:
Last fiddled with by Uncwilly on 2014-11-30 at 05:11 |
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