Most Likes Page: @mfb Approaching 5000 Likes on Physics Forums

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The discussion centers around @mfb nearing 5000 likes on Physics Forums, celebrating the effort of members who contribute significantly to the community. Participants express a mix of humor and competitiveness regarding their own like counts, with @Drakkith recently tying for 10th place with @Orodruin. The importance of likes as an indicator of effort in providing valuable responses is acknowledged, though some members joke about the perceived unfairness of the system. The conversation also touches on the dynamics of likes versus post counts and the unique contributions of various members. Overall, the thread highlights camaraderie and light-hearted competition among forum members.
  • #271
berkeman said:
And can you please turn down the music? We're trying to concentrate down here... o0)
There is no way to listen to Lemmy low.
 
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  • #272
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Likes davenn, Stavros Kiri, anorlunda and 5 others
  • #273
@fresh_42 took the overall lead in likes at 11342!

11342 = 106*107
 
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  • #274
mfb said:
@fresh_42 took the overall lead in likes at 11342!

11342 = 106*107

Now he just needs to get up to 1,224,936 likes. That's 106*107*108.
 
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  • #275
mfb said:
@fresh_42 took the overall lead in likes at 11342!

11342 = 106*107
Not anymore! I really ( and literally) liked your post. And suspense. Germans ahead.
 
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  • #276
Drakkith said:
Now he just needs to get up to 1,224,936 likes. That's 106*107*108.
I remember Halls of Ivy at one point reached 32768= ## 2^{15} ## posts. It seemed like a shame to
write anything else , since he needed another 32768 to reach ## 2^{16} ##
 
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  • #277
fresh_42 said:
There is no way to listen to Lemmy low.
I'll listen. Lemmy have it!
 
  • #278
WWGD said:
I remember Halls of Ivy at one point reached 32768= ## 2^{15} ## posts. It seemed like a shame to
write anything else , since he needed another 32768 to reach ## 2^{16} ##
310 = 59049 comes a bit earlier.
There is also 66 = 46656.
 
  • #279
mfb 106•107 + 2 ...

= 709x2⁴

Also the previous (13342)/2 = 53•107 ...

Finally, Drakkith 4884 = 1221•4 = 407•3•4
 
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  • #280
Charles Link said:
@OCR Perhaps a more positive song by John Prine (in reference to the "link" you provided) is "Hello in There" or "In Spite of Ourselves". His guitar playing is good in the song, but his songs "Sam Stone", "Angel from Montgomery", and "Dear Abby" are much more inspiring than the song in the "link". Anyway, I enjoy the "likes" page and I am glad the Physics Forums keeps this statistic.
ooh another John Prine fan
I got to see and hear him perform in Milwaukee,
and again in Maywood, IL, where he'd grown up ##-##
I want to cry that we lost him to the virus ##-##
I think that he woulda been even more upset that
we lost Mary Ann than that we lost him
even after he beat throat cancer
what a great songwriter singer performer he was ##\dots##
 
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  • #282
WWGD said:
Not anymore! I really ( and literally) liked your post. And suspense. Germans ahead.
This is probably due to the fact that against all rumors we actually do have humor!
E.g.:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPZX7EZIFD0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lddoHQIZQto
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5n7VI0rC8ZA
 
  • #283
Stavros Kiri said:
mfb 106•107 + 2 ...

= 709x2⁴

Also the previous (13342)/2 = 53•107 ...

Finally, Drakkith 4884 = 1221•4 = 407•3•4
There are other interesting ones around, like 40320=8!
 
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  • #284
WWGD said:
There are other interesting ones around, like 40320=8!
That one's good ##-## the problem of finding all mathematically interesting ZIP codes may be tougher than NP-hard or NP-complete ##-## what about halving the length? ##-## in the Chinese historical novel The Water Margin (the term refers to a swampy area) (the novel is part of The Three Kingdoms set of works) the Monks in the Shao-Lin Temple were killed as the Ching dynasty overthrew the Ming Dynasty and General Kwan and his 2 friends escaped and swore an oath of fidelity in the Peach Garden, and went to the marshy area with 108 Disciples.

##108=1^1 \times 2^2 \times 3^3##
 
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  • #285
sysprog said:
That one's good the problem of finding all mathematically interesting ZIP codes may be tougher than NP-hard or NP-complete
All of them are interesting. If there would be a boring ZIP code then there would be a smallest boring ZIP code, which would be an interesting property - contradiction.
 
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Likes Klystron, WWGD, DrGreg and 1 other person
  • #286
mfb said:
All of them are interesting. If there would be a boring ZIP code then there would be a smallest boring ZIP code, which would be an interesting property - contradiction.
Of course that's right, but of course, that doesn't make all numbers equally interesting ##\dots##
 
  • #287
sysprog said:
Of course that's right, but of course, that doesn't make all numbers equally interesting ##\dots##
But in that case the least interesting number is surely more interesting than the least-interesting-but-one number, which presents a problem.
 
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  • #288
Of course we do know, interestingness partly inheres in us; not only in the things in which we're interested.
 
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  • #289
mfb said:
All of them are interesting. If there would be a boring ZIP code then there would be a smallest boring ZIP code, which would be an interesting property - contradiction.
Still, we will always have boring machines ;).
 
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  • #290
WWGD said:
Still, we will always have boring machines ;).
I use mine if I want to make whipped cream.
 
  • #291
Ibix said:
But in that case the least interesting number is surely more interesting than the least-interesting-but-one number, which presents a problem.
No, numbers can get decreasingly interesting as they get larger.
 
  • #292
mfb said:
No, numbers can get decreasingly interesting as they get larger.

Well I hope you didn't tell them that. No reason to be rude to already overly-sized numbers.
 
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  • #293
Hey, it's not my fault that 7583545425224273734+752373354421262623 is so large.

PS: This is likely the first time anyone ever considered this specific number. I made it far more interesting than before.
 
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  • #294
mfb said:
Hey, it's not my fault that 7583545425224273734+752373354421262623 is so large.

PS: This is likely the first time anyone ever considered this specific number. I made it far more interesting than before.
You should name it and demand its prime factor decomposition to be listed on OEIS! Did anyone ever wondered that although we stress that ##n\to \infty## all the time, we rarely deal with anything larger than say 1,000,000?
 
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  • #295
A57534454646343
Prime factorization of 7583545425224273734+752373354421262623:

2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2 (list; graph; refs; listen; history; text; internal format)
 
  • #296
mfb said:
A57534454646343
Prime factorization of 7583545425224273734+752373354421262623:

2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2 (list; graph; refs; listen; history; text; internal format)
Fresh conjecture: The 62,624th number of this sequence is greater than 3.
 
  • #297
It's not:
7583545425224273734+752373354421262623 = 25425224273734*3791775425224273734 + 22*62623 * 362623 * 62697779535162623
The first 125246 numbers are all "2".

The first term is not divisible by 3 but the second is, so we do not get a factor 3.
Mod 5 the first term is 4 and the second term is 3, so the number is not divisible by 5 either.

@PeterDonis joined our club of 11,000+.
 
  • #298
How about an unlikely Benford number? Isn't then , e.g., 999.999 interesting, given it is unlikely to appear in a human-generated document? It seems the more you know the more you know , either everything looks interesting or nothing does.
 
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  • #299
There are lists of special numbers on Wikipedia.
 
  • #300
mfb said:
Hey, it's not my fault that 7583545425224273734+752373354421262623 is so large.

PS: This is likely the first time anyone ever considered this specific number. I made it far more interesting than before.
How about converting that into a password. Then we'll probably see that "Sorry! This password has been used ..." (Don't you hate that!? ...)
 
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