“I’m a cranky old Yank, from a clanky old tank, on the streets of Yokohama with my Honalulu mama, singing those beat-o beat-o flat on my seat-o Hiroheto blues” Not perfect on the spelling. This ,I belive is the longest song title.
sqrt of 1 = 1
sqrt of 2 = 1.414213562373 (alright, it came in handy in Geometry)
sqrt of 3 = 1.73205080756 (again, geometry)
the longest word in the english language is[/ pneumonalultramicroscopicosilicovolcanoconiosis…45 letters, if I spelled it correctly
A really long German word is “Donaudampfschiffmeisterinshutt” which is a female river boat captain’s hat…(incidentally, the German word for liquid manure channel is jaucherinne, in case anyone was dying to know)
The file path to my IM log files is C:\program files rillian\users\default\logs
I can identify 99% of all ST:TNG episodes after 10-15 seconds…neat parlor trick, I suppose
Ya know, I’ll stop listing and just say I’ve been told I’m a wealth of useless knowledge…
While completely useless, memorizing 660 digits of pi is pretty impressive. I often trip on the first 5, and call it a 6.
I’m curious, can any of you folks write an algorithm that will produce the digits of the irrational numbers that you’ve memorized? That would have taken far less time to learn than it would have to memorize the numbers.
The method of compression of a bitmap (BMP) image is at the 31st byte in the bitmap. 00 - RGB, 01 - RLE 8, 02 - RLE 4, 03 - BitFields. The two bytes just before that (29th and 30th) are the number of bits per pixel.
This was actually pretty useful just recently, too.
I can name all fifty US States in order alphabetically.
I can say the Greek and French alphabets just as fast as I can say the English one.
I can name every single element on the Periodic Table of the Elements, in order, including the rows under the table. And I can put down the symbol for each element.
I can name all thirty cities that host an NHL team, the team’s name, and at least one current player from each team.
Oh, and I can recite scads of poetry that I’ve had to learn, but that’s not quite so useless to me now.
My parents’ phone number from the house and town where we lived in 1969.
I was told to memorize that number, and if I ever became lost, to give that number to a policeman.
I’m thirty-nine now, but if I ever get lost… well… I’m screwed. That number’s been inactive since 1972, so far as I know, and I can’t remember their phone number NOW to save my life…
The Monty Python sketch on word association, spoken by Cleese: Tonights the night I shall be talking about of flu the subject of word association football. This is a technique out a living much used …" and on and on and on.
The periodic table (not the lanthanides and actinides :() - but that is useful.
Wow pi to 660 places. I only know pi to 9 decimal places. The same number as shown on a calculator.
My sister’s phone number from oh, about 8 years ago. And my locker combination from the same year, number 96. 49-25-45. I had 69 to start with, but it was a top locker, and in seventh grade I was too short to reach the lock. That combination was 1-7-27.
-Lil
I had this conversation with a friend at work one time and he came up with one I’ve never been able to top. I was pulling out all the useless things I know, and he just stumped me. He said “I know the name of Sir. Isaac Newton’s dog”. I looked at him funny and said, “Why the hell would you devote brain cells to the name of Sir Isaac Newton’s dog? Is it funny or something? Is his dog’s name ‘Appleton’ or something that would stick?” “Nope,” he said “the dog’s name was Diamond.”
I still can’t top that one. I’ve got a lot of fairly useless knowledge, but I can’t beat out having memorized the name of Sir Isaac Newton’s dog.