by BillBixby » Tue Jan 28, 2014 5:11 am
rstevenson wrote:geckzilla wrote:Wait, Rob. Where are you trying to go in 20 years at .999999999999 c?
Remember, I'd get to M82 in 20 of
my years in the ship, but back here on Earth, you stick-in-the-muds will experience about 12 million years. If M82 turns out to be boring, I'll come back in another 20 years (ignoring the humungous accelerations and decelerations involved, just to keep things simple) and we can all catch up on who won all the Super Bowls I missed. Then I'll sit down to watch Super Bowl 24002014. (I leave as a challenge for the reader converting that to Roman Numerals.)
Rob
Rob, I have decided to attempt your challenge (because it is there). 24002014 in Roman Numerals (RN): But, first...
Let's add some commas for conventionalism. 24,002,014 (Makes it easier for me to see the target. Plus they will be used, by me, in the completed answer, so the answer may be more easily read. I don't think the Romans had a comma back then though I bet they wish they had.)
The Binary answer, as shown in a Google web search would be 0b1011011100011110111011110
Nitpicker said the correct discussion for the then current Super Bowl based upon a vision of the Super Bowl of the distant future being played by robots (perhaps also with an alternative, lingerie-clad league). It would therefore be in hexadecimal: Super Bowl 16E3DDE.
Anyway, I brushed-up on my Roman Numerals at
http://www.mathsisfun.com/roman-numerals.html and discovered that I shall be breaking the rule of using more than three of the same characters in a row (have to love the comma). Per the website, above, numbers greater than 1,000 are formed by placing a dash over the symbol, meaning "times 1,000", but these are not commonly used: M̅ equals a million, so:
M̅ M̅ M̅,M̅ M̅ M̅, M̅ M̅ M̅,M̅ M̅ M̅, M̅ M̅ M̅,M̅ M̅ M̅, M̅ M̅ M̅,M̅ M̅ M̅,MMXIV
Note the last five (v) characters (2014) do not have the dash over them and I chose not to include a comma. Just pretend the number has no commas, at all, and the answer I came up with may be correct. I had this all set up in Word to transfer here with the dash over the M. However, since the big bang transfer the dash and the M seem to have experienced some red shift using the Ancient Roman Numeral system. It may not be shifted to extremely as the dash over the letter concept appears to have been added in the middle ages. It would have taken a lot more of the letter M had the dash not become available.
Rob, thank you for the challenge.
Bill
[quote="rstevenson"][quote="geckzilla"]Wait, Rob. Where are you trying to go in 20 years at .999999999999 c?[/quote]
Remember, I'd get to M82 in 20 of [i]my[/i] years in the ship, but back here on Earth, you stick-in-the-muds will experience about 12 million years. If M82 turns out to be boring, I'll come back in another 20 years (ignoring the humungous accelerations and decelerations involved, just to keep things simple) and we can all catch up on who won all the Super Bowls I missed. Then I'll sit down to watch Super Bowl 24002014. (I leave as a challenge for the reader converting that to Roman Numerals.)
Rob[/quote]
Rob, I have decided to attempt your challenge (because it is there). 24002014 in Roman Numerals (RN): But, first...
Let's add some commas for conventionalism. 24,002,014 (Makes it easier for me to see the target. Plus they will be used, by me, in the completed answer, so the answer may be more easily read. I don't think the Romans had a comma back then though I bet they wish they had.)
The Binary answer, as shown in a Google web search would be 0b1011011100011110111011110
Nitpicker said the correct discussion for the then current Super Bowl based upon a vision of the Super Bowl of the distant future being played by robots (perhaps also with an alternative, lingerie-clad league). It would therefore be in hexadecimal: Super Bowl 16E3DDE.
Anyway, I brushed-up on my Roman Numerals at http://www.mathsisfun.com/roman-numerals.html and discovered that I shall be breaking the rule of using more than three of the same characters in a row (have to love the comma). Per the website, above, numbers greater than 1,000 are formed by placing a dash over the symbol, meaning "times 1,000", but these are not commonly used: M̅ equals a million, so:
[b]
M̅ M̅ M̅,M̅ M̅ M̅, M̅ M̅ M̅,M̅ M̅ M̅, M̅ M̅ M̅,M̅ M̅ M̅, M̅ M̅ M̅,M̅ M̅ M̅,MMXIV[/b]
Note the last five (v) characters (2014) do not have the dash over them and I chose not to include a comma. Just pretend the number has no commas, at all, and the answer I came up with may be correct. I had this all set up in Word to transfer here with the dash over the M. However, since the big bang transfer the dash and the M seem to have experienced some red shift using the Ancient Roman Numeral system. It may not be shifted to extremely as the dash over the letter concept appears to have been added in the middle ages. It would have taken a lot more of the letter M had the dash not become available.
Rob, thank you for the challenge.
Bill