I will celebrate by playing around with my Raspberry PI project. Wonder if they thought it was a big deal back in 1592?
watch this movie to celebrate. great to hear from you, mike
Radio alarm goes off at 7:00. Always argue with myself for a couple minutes as to calling in sick and staying in bed (Remember, I'm the boss). Anyway. At about 7:01 the radio announcer says, "Happy Pi Day". He calls it three one four and 314 but never 3.14 He obviously had no clue as to how pi is used. He was merely reading off of some script. What a maroon, as Bugs Bunny would say.
Or Jeff Dunham's Walter would say "Dumbass!"
My daughter and her friend made this awesome video for PI day for a school project, I'll post it when she gets home this evening...
PI is our friend...
My son (14) plans to compete in the pi competition at school today. When I checked him last night, he correctly recited pi to 200 digits. His memory amazes me.
Amazing... good genes is part of it. That plus good examples is often a winning combination. You should be proud.
I am looking forward to watching it. Comes out for rental soon. Say... nice cover on the new PS magazine. Good job on the writing too, Eddie.
The 17th most common 10-digit password is 3141592654
You just exposed every Surveyor's password, LOL 😉
And Happy Birthday Albert Einstein!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY GLENN WOOD
A few years ago today I was at an on-site with the clients, attorneys, experts, the neighbors, their attorneys, their experts and the DEP. The weather was great.
The neighbors, their attorneys, their experts and the DEP were down on the beach. My client, his attorneys, experts and myself were up on the deck.
I announced "Happy Pi Day everybody." Then had to explain it.
Attorney Glenn Wood announced, "Today is my birthday."
To which the client responded, "Happy Pi Day everybody!"
> My son (14) plans to compete in the pi competition at school today. When I checked him last night, he correctly recited pi to 200 digits.
He duplicated the performance at school today, but a female classmate bested him by a factor of two, reciting over 400 digits. I'm impressed.