Free for life! 1 TB hdd KVM celebrating LESbians 1000-2000-3000-4000-5000-6000-7000-8000-9000-10000
This thread is dedicated to the selection of random LES forum members to receive a fine fine superfine FREE FOR LIFE 1 TB STORAGE KVM from @cociu
We are following the lulz-infused process for fair pseudo-random selections established in the previous thread: that is, people submit their favorite "random" numbers in comments in this thread - then once the next threshold of signups has been reached, the crowdsourced numbers are hashed to make a random seed to select a lucky winner.
You don't have to do anything other than register as a LowEndSpirit member to be eligible to win - but if you are so fortunate as to be selected, you will need to respond within 3 days of being notified via PM in order to claim the prize - otherwise we'll move on to the backup selectee(s) just so we don't get stuck waiting too long for good closure. So please, "Lurk with Confidence!"
I believe the spec is as specified earlier (but might double-check if the "raid 6 or 60" is still accurate).
Speck :
1 core
1 gb ram
1 tb hdd raid 6 or 60
10tb/mo traffic (1 gbps port speed shared)
1 ipv4
located in Romania.
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
Comments
O.K.
Been awhile since I last posted something here. I enjoyed reading here Hmmmmmmmmmmm
53411
Alrighty then - now for the selection celebrating signup #1000
The secret was:
4105101558976783721
The concatenated crowdsourced digits hashed to create the seed
b1381e45222a382568f38de44c04cff5726622afc35afc0071e4d29e17b7878a
And the lucky winner is: https://talk.lowendspirit.com/profile/39/name -> OG @Mr_Tom !
(Not to be confused with previous winner @TomG - I hope! Lol ... I had to double check a few things when I saw that!)
I'll send a PM and hope to hear back within 3 days - otherwise we do have some backup winners, and backups of backups, and ...
notes (see also last comment in previous thread):
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
Count me in please
where are the LESbians?
uptime... tell me!!!
Nice! Here's some fresh randomness from me:
49999
.158117
This time it will be 73
This space intentionally left blank
3275614
How about a bunch of 8s?
88888888
Some more numbers to add to the party - 5936502
74728484
We are the LESbians, bro!
LET us not get too carried away with this smoking hot steamy double entendre
but do take a moment to embrace the Spirit of our inner LESbian nature
something something sisters
with respect
Happy Valentine's day!
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
Nice. . 3843843
Great Provider: Hetzner, LetBox, Lunanode
4215081947
blog | exploring visually |
e^ipi
EDIT: oy, I just noticed the i in @uhu's nod to Euler, lol
Leaving remaining commentary for posterity and lulz
from Proofs Without Words via stackexchange
See also:
Nice one ... How many digits of the result shall I include?
If unspecified (and trivially computable) I might make a general policy to truncate at eleven positions to the right of the decimal point for this sort of number.
note that truncating in this manner yields
whereas rounding would result in
Furthermore, in any event, no more than 1000 digits will be included from any submission, because ain't nobody got time for that!
Also please note that the decimal point itself will not be included in the final concatenated string. For entirely arbitrary reasons - consistency being a small-minded hobgoblin and all that - I run the penultimate digits through a filter when concatenating:
That is all.
Thank you for your contribution in the noble pursuit of primo pseudo-randomness!
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
uptime ... you just reminded me of my 1993 Fortran class. on such a machine
@ehab thanks I will take that as a compliment - though I find myself leaning more towards Forth than FORTRAN these days
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
Heh, sorry, I should have made it a bit clearer.
Seems like a good idea!
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
7777 33 66 3 66 88 3 33 7777
食之无味 弃之可惜 - Too arduous to relish, too wasteful to discard.
Yeah, those are some good numbers, can't argue with that.
this may be as good a place as any to drop in a secret number <- warning pdf not exactly about commutative combinatorics or suchwhat ...
the sha256sum of the secret is
2a75652b3d873e0f89cafb6473c913b4735c0f0e965bb5a7f35d9db79b8b1d50
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
42!
alrighty then!
HS4LIFE (+ (* 3 4) (* 5 6))
420
12434
21504
11019
40113
10005
12119
99563
39933
58497
96849
98464
Cheap dedis are my drug, and I'm too far gone to turn back.
112051
6975559