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12mon
11

binary times table rule

inspired by The Best Way To Count.

DashboTreeFrog @discuss.online - 11mon

This loss meme is a bit complicated

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thatKamGuy @sh.itjust.works - 11mon

Loss in the n^th^ dimension.

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lnxtx (xe/xem/xyr) - 11mon

Hexadecimal representation with extra steps.

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KSP Atlas - 11mon

The system in the video allowed using and easily converting between any base that's a power of 2, like octal and yes, hexadecimal

The person here is using octal

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hihi24522 @lemm.ee - 11mon

Technically this is Octal since each digit (continuous symbol) has 8 possible states before you reach the next digit. 🤓

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nycki @lemmy.world - 11mon

I'm using octal as a sub-base to make it easier to count digits, just like using commas to group decimal digits. I think that still counts as binary tho!

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anton - 11mon

There are 11 possible "digits". 🤓🤓

By your definition having some separator every 3 decimal digits would make it base 1 000. 🤓🤓🤓

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KSP Atlas - 11mon

I thought the finger counting system in that video wasn't particularly great (the solution for finger issues was a bad one, and four (I..) can easily be interpreted as a rude gesture) but the mental maths systems were cool

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campbell @lemm.ee - 11mon

I found that holding my thumb horizontally and either putting fingers on top of or behind it worked better for me

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Another Catgirl - 11mon

The second row reads 10 11 100 101 110 111 111*111=110001

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nycki @lemmy.world - 11mon

wow i cant believe nobody else pointed this out but today someone on discord informed me that I accidentally misplaced a bit when multiplying 10 by 101. According to this chart, two times five is eighteen.

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