Why a Book of 1 Million Random Numbers Sells for $68

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
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    Video written by Adam Chase
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Комментарии • 1,7 тыс.

  • @halfasinteresting
    @halfasinteresting  3 года назад +1309

    If we had a book of infinite random words, somewhere in there would be the perfect, holy grail of HAI topics, but unfortunately we don't. If you have that holy grail topic, though, suggest it to us, and we will reward you with one whole HAI t-shirt if we use it (shipped out once per quarter. Terms and conditions apply or something idk I'm not a lawyer.) Submit your topic here!: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfUdlvw6YgU44J8AnM2U_ZvRMyvh_CUM51LYSqF5nYJB9d1-w/viewform?usp=sf_link

    • @AVeryRandomPerson
      @AVeryRandomPerson 3 года назад +5

      No

    • @fortune3911
      @fortune3911 3 года назад +4

      Hey you

    • @dakshbhatt811
      @dakshbhatt811 3 года назад +5

      I've submitted 25 suggestions in the past 2 days!!!

    • @anniversarynotice1838
      @anniversarynotice1838 3 года назад +5

      Today, October 2nd, is Senior Citizens' Day.
      It is a statutory anniversary established in 1997 with the aim of promoting national measures, along with awakening public interest in the issue of senior citizens. And it is also the birthday of Allingsong (Gk), a Liverpool soccer player

    • @nuclearfox210
      @nuclearfox210 3 года назад +14

      but... this book exists

  • @Skeke
    @Skeke 3 года назад +3527

    The book's price should be random for each buyer

    • @nitehawk86
      @nitehawk86 3 года назад +384

      So, Amazon's pricing system?

    • @madwax4771
      @madwax4771 3 года назад +152

      According to my previous random chances in life, I would have to pay atleast 1M dollars for it

    • @gameseeker6307
      @gameseeker6307 3 года назад +8

      @@nitehawk86 what?

    • @skilledskeleton3124
      @skilledskeleton3124 3 года назад +78

      It should be 69$ they ruined it

    • @sweeflyboy
      @sweeflyboy 3 года назад +19

      That one guy who gets an impossibly high price...

  • @SignificantNumberOfBeavers
    @SignificantNumberOfBeavers 3 года назад +4907

    I love half as interesting. Random facts, stock footage, and sarcastic jokes.

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад +110

      Not so good puns too.

    • @DiracComb.7585
      @DiracComb.7585 3 года назад +48

      Broderik Craig facts nearly as random as the numbers in this book

    • @Laittth
      @Laittth 3 года назад +28

      Said Sam's secret alt account

    • @K9nn9th
      @K9nn9th 3 года назад +13

      And bricks!!

    • @economicsinaction
      @economicsinaction 3 года назад +4

      Perfectly balanced

  • @Lukusprime
    @Lukusprime 3 года назад +681

    “Used that information to steal millions from casinos” no, he earned those millions

  • @CompletelyNormal
    @CompletelyNormal 3 года назад +450

    If you buy a book that says "Rand" on the front, honestly a million random digits is a best-case scenario.

    • @highviewbarbell
      @highviewbarbell 2 года назад +8

      damn that's funny

    • @magic8ball237
      @magic8ball237 2 года назад +2

      Truuu

    • @michka841
      @michka841 2 года назад +18

      and it's the one that actually makes the most sense

    • @andybaldman
      @andybaldman 2 года назад +2

      Idiots who don’t get Ayn Rand.

    • @xwtek3505
      @xwtek3505 Год назад +3

      The worst case is Atlas Shrugged

  • @FantFrei
    @FantFrei 3 года назад +2183

    reminds me of the first class every semester when the professors say something like "and if you wanna prepare for this class i suggest THESE books" then they share links to their own overpriced terrible books because a life as a professor seemingly doesnt pay enough

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад +69

      Source : Why books are so expensive?
      Price : $1000

    • @tylerr2126
      @tylerr2126 3 года назад +5

      Lol

    • @diasturien
      @diasturien 3 года назад +202

      Well, trust me when I say it really really doesn't pay until you're 20-30 years in and have tenure. Source: finishing my PhD now, and very much broke.

    • @Djuntas
      @Djuntas 3 года назад +78

      Meanwhile in Denmark we have high school teachers after 10 years at the same school making good salaries, whats up USA :p

    • @DavidUtau
      @DavidUtau 3 года назад +7

      @@pasdpasse439 congrats you posted cringe

  • @bracco23
    @bracco23 3 года назад +1481

    4:30 it's literally "some russian name" in russian lol

    • @coleslater1419
      @coleslater1419 3 года назад +33

      I was going to comment the same thing

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад +71

      "Some English name" in English.

    • @leslaw1979
      @leslaw1979 3 года назад +7

      I was looking for this comment hha

    • @NevermindFlame
      @NevermindFlame 3 года назад +12

      Did he stutter ... ?

    • @pierreabbat6157
      @pierreabbat6157 3 года назад +4

      @@coleslater1419 Я тоже

  • @valentinoamatsaleh6563
    @valentinoamatsaleh6563 3 года назад +509

    Her: What is your occupation?
    Author: Im a writer
    Her: Really?!?!! What kind of books do you write?
    Author :It's complicated

    • @kari7403
      @kari7403 3 года назад +33

      "It's complicated?" Or, "I dunno. Random stuff."

    • @Tigerskunk
      @Tigerskunk 3 года назад +10

      @@kari7403 or it's both or neither. Its all just a random answer.

    • @kari7403
      @kari7403 3 года назад +3

      @@Tigerskunk a complicated random answer? Maybe?
      😁

    • @davidt8087
      @davidt8087 3 года назад +2

      It's so pathetic that you morons fall for this whole "limited time only" scam. Almost ALL youtubers when they say "buy my merch now because it's only for a limited time" is always lying. It's NEVER for a limited time ever ever. You can check YEARS later and something that was supposedly only available for a week is STILL AVAILABLE AFTER 4 YEARS. You people are too dumb to read between the lines, and realize it's a scam and a lie to create a false sense of urgency to get you morons to Immeadiately waste your money and pay up to buy some stupid shirt with a stupid design/logo that if you wear it outside and someone sees it they'll think your a nerd or geek or just so pathetic for buying a youtubers shirt who does nothing but go on Wikipedia and copy and paste the contents in an overly drawn out video with stock footage to make money and you people idolize skmeone like this. How is it the young generation are so dumb they always fall for this scam of "limited time" only? Seriously are you people that dumb you can't open your eyes and sense that he's creating a fake sense of urgency to get you to buy the shitty merch right away?

    • @joeblow5178
      @joeblow5178 3 года назад +1

      @@davidt8087 You typed ALL that ? Hehehe hahaha

  • @astralityyy
    @astralityyy 3 года назад +316

    i read the title as “why a book of random numbers sells for $68 million”

    • @xexpaguette
      @xexpaguette 3 года назад +11

      PLOT TWIST: THAT WAS THE ORIGINAL TITLE BUT HE CHANGED IT

    • @astralityyy
      @astralityyy 3 года назад +3

      @@xexpaguette omg imagine

    • @BlackGoldSaya
      @BlackGoldSaya 3 года назад +1

      Same

    • @kari7403
      @kari7403 3 года назад +7

      I saw it say something like, $68 800k. Only the 8 looked kinda weird. Took me a minute to realize it said *book* and not 800k. Lol

    • @rockyhermitYT
      @rockyhermitYT 3 года назад

      Same

  • @dalethepalemale6855
    @dalethepalemale6855 3 года назад +154

    It's actually super interesting how true random numbers are generated using thunderstorms, lava lamps, or even just kinetic energy from the atmosphere.

  • @economicsinaction
    @economicsinaction 3 года назад +308

    1:07
    Wait what.. this isn't stock footage!

    • @Dmanthepowerful
      @Dmanthepowerful 3 года назад +23

      Heresy!

    • @pulkitmohta8964
      @pulkitmohta8964 3 года назад +1

      Are you sure it's not?

    • @Ethan5I5
      @Ethan5I5 3 года назад

      Sam is the guy that makes stock footage (satire)

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 3 года назад +2

      That's gotta be at least three quarters as interesting!

    • @pasatorman8294
      @pasatorman8294 3 года назад +3

      @@davidt8087 if you dont like a youtuber just dont watch them because its really annoying when people like you open videos just to say how bad they are

  • @AdamSmith-ig5bu
    @AdamSmith-ig5bu 3 года назад +145

    1:07 A small peek in the HAI office.

    • @neelima6460
      @neelima6460 3 года назад +1

      "Adam Smith was wrong"
      J Nash

    • @AdamSmith-ig5bu
      @AdamSmith-ig5bu 3 года назад +2

      @@neelima6460 why am i wrong, i don't get it ?

    • @neelima6460
      @neelima6460 3 года назад +4

      @@AdamSmith-ig5bu , It's a quote from movie beautiful mind.😄

  • @Hano..
    @Hano.. 3 года назад +125

    When are they gonna make the sequel: 2 million random numbers

    • @equaius893
      @equaius893 3 года назад +3

      Cant wait! I've read the first one over and over and am waiting so see where it goes next!

    • @tonyman1106
      @tonyman1106 3 года назад +5

      I know right that 2248373672 was the best part

    • @zarinjanis
      @zarinjanis 3 года назад +8

      I read like first 400 pages but then 25339 came and it ruined the whole story.

    • @FrozenBusChannel
      @FrozenBusChannel 3 года назад +1

      Why not make it into a series: *A Random Number of Random Numbers*

    • @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721
      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721 3 года назад

      Okay but they should have different numbers in each edition of it.

  • @569C
    @569C 3 года назад +513

    My stats teacher had this book and flexed it on the whole class

    • @harshitarao2225
      @harshitarao2225 3 года назад +7

      Lol

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад +15

      How much pages was it? Did you find the number of pages as a random number in the book?

    • @naufalap
      @naufalap 3 года назад +29

      yeah would be hard to flex if it has too many pages

    • @alyandthecats
      @alyandthecats 3 года назад +10

      The textbooks only ever had like half a page of random numbers at the back, and that was usually good for a whole year of high school stats lol

    • @davidt8087
      @davidt8087 3 года назад

      It's so pathetic that you morons fall for this whole "limited time only" scam. Almost ALL youtubers when they say "buy my merch now because it's only for a limited time" is always lying. It's NEVER for a limited time ever ever. You can check YEARS later and something that was supposedly only available for a week is STILL AVAILABLE AFTER 4 YEARS. You people are too dumb to read between the lines, and realize it's a scam and a lie to create a false sense of urgency to get you morons to Immeadiately waste your money and pay up to buy some stupid shirt with a stupid design/logo that if you wear it outside and someone sees it they'll think your a nerd or geek or just so pathetic for buying a youtubers shirt who does nothing but go on Wikipedia and copy and paste the contents in an overly drawn out video with stock footage to make money and you people idolize skmeone like this. How is it the young generation are so dumb they always fall for this scam of "limited time" only? Seriously are you people that dumb you can't open your eyes and sense that he's creating a fake sense of urgency to get you to buy the shitty merch right away

  • @pegeonpera
    @pegeonpera 3 года назад +1874

    "Just as today's reddit memes can predict tomorrow's Instagram memes"
    Sam is a redditor confirmed

    • @anniversarynotice1838
      @anniversarynotice1838 3 года назад +13

      Today, October 2nd, is Senior Citizens' Day.
      It is a statutory anniversary established in 1997 with the aim of promoting national measures, along with awakening public interest in the issue of senior citizens. And it is also the birthday of Allingsong (Gk), a Liverpool soccer player

    • @kjellvin1004
      @kjellvin1004 3 года назад +39

      I can smell him from over here

    • @forkrunner2208
      @forkrunner2208 3 года назад +6

      It’s the other way around.

    • @Cemtexify
      @Cemtexify 3 года назад +33

      You couldn't tell from his orange man bad jokes in every video?

    • @matthewe919
      @matthewe919 3 года назад +49

      @@Cemtexify orange fan sad?

  • @GriffinStorm
    @GriffinStorm 3 года назад +69

    I got a copy of this from my university's free book event about 6 years ago when they were downsizing their catalog at the library. I sold it on Amazon for somewhere between $50 and $80.

  • @danijelandroid
    @danijelandroid 3 года назад +25

    4:30 Let's be honest. Stealing from a casino is like stealing your money back from a thief. Casinos have 'stacked the deck/the house always wins'. It is never a fair 'contest'.

  • @PrimeMinus
    @PrimeMinus 3 года назад +149

    The guy over at Wendover Products is so weird.

    • @clayheinzerling1852
      @clayheinzerling1852 3 года назад +8

      Yeah almost as weird as the guy at Wendover Productions

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад +4

      Weird like the guys at Half as Interesting

    • @PrimeMinus
      @PrimeMinus 3 года назад

      Yeah just as weird as him

    • @stormyhot4945
      @stormyhot4945 3 года назад +1

      Yeah but wendover has longer vids and talks about planes

    • @teunboskers7114
      @teunboskers7114 3 года назад +1

      what a complete nerd

  • @neeneko
    @neeneko 3 года назад +60

    heh.
    Years ago I worked on a gambling machine, and determinism was actually a big part of getting past regulators. I literally had to create a table of random seeds to their eventual outcome, and then embed the whitelist in the machine so that we could guarantee that any random play's results would fall within a certain range. We even had the ability to switch between tables so operators could control what payouts would look like.

    • @phxcppdvlazi
      @phxcppdvlazi 2 года назад +2

      I read that gambling is actually strictly regulated in Nevada since it is kind of the lifeblood there. Did the machines you worked on use a microsecond stopwatch to pick a seed?

    • @neeneko
      @neeneko 2 года назад

      @@phxcppdvlazi Yeah, Nevada and New Jersey were both nightmares to develop for, with Utah being a close second. Though in this case the project I was on was for a UK machine.
      As for our seed, I think we just used system clock based entropy and some install time salt.

    • @NaudVanDalen
      @NaudVanDalen 2 года назад

      Can't you use a random number generator card you can plug into a computer? I assume all slot machines are connected to a server to track all revenue and outcomes.

  • @maximusprimus2313
    @maximusprimus2313 3 года назад +17

    Ive actually read this book. I got a copy very old copy from my library. I was studying computer games and went down a rabbit hole about random numbers. In one of the texts mentioned this holy grail of a book had my library do a search and they found another library willing to lone it to me. I graphed, explored mapped compared sections to the stock market migrating geese and really enjoyed the book. I learned there is no true random except what time i got up. Lol

  • @casey6556
    @casey6556 3 года назад +22

    Tom Scott literally did a video about a company that uses lava lamps as random number generators LMAO

  • @AlessandroRodriguez
    @AlessandroRodriguez 3 года назад +266

    HAI: framing your friends for tax evasion _as a prank_
    Me: Oh, sure, sure _as a prank_ .....

  • @joermnyc
    @joermnyc 3 года назад +67

    4:30, takes the time to translate: “Some kind of Russian name” instead of figuring out how to pronounce the actual name... and that’s why we love HAI. 👏 👏

    • @lx4302
      @lx4302 3 года назад

      Huh? Are you trying to be sarcastc?

    • @candidentertainment335
      @candidentertainment335 3 года назад +5

      The name literally means "some Russian name"

  • @deadmg3746
    @deadmg3746 3 года назад +15

    Processors actually generate *true* random numbers from random quantum fluctuations. Their supply of these is limited but more than enough for a slot machine or a cryptography key every now and then.

  • @pulkitmohta8964
    @pulkitmohta8964 3 года назад +8

    That green coloured tick that was made at 5:18 was just so satisfying

    • @tw7321
      @tw7321 2 года назад

      Not really, it didn’t go right through the corner 😭

  • @jclown5938
    @jclown5938 3 года назад +27

    "$68"
    *We were on the verge of greatness. We were this close*

  • @ScottCalvinsClause
    @ScottCalvinsClause Год назад +4

    I knew a guy whose life long hobby was trying to find patterns in that book. He was one of those corn farmer, genius types. He had a small, isolated corn farm in the grain belt and I would occasionally visit him to buy/sell "herbs". He played classical violin and would often have jeopardy playing in the background. He would correctly answer the trivia, mid-sentence without missing a beat. He told me that he was was pretty sure he would never find the equation to debunk the randomness but kept trying for " fun and entertainment ". His copy of the book was so worn, I had to believe him.

    • @bruce4139
      @bruce4139 9 месяцев назад +1

      This is the type of guy that I would love to nerd out with and just listen to everything he can teach me

  • @dailysacrificedoublee
    @dailysacrificedoublee 3 года назад +71

    4:48
    I, for one, have very predictable emotions. These will be my emotions for the next week:
    This concludes my list. Specify which teenagers in particular next time.

    • @bryanfolkert2854
      @bryanfolkert2854 3 года назад +2

      This is one of the most relatable jokes I’ve seen

    • @akhilalot
      @akhilalot 3 года назад

      I think this is true even for non teenagers in 2020

    • @JrottenOlm
      @JrottenOlm 3 года назад

      What a teenagery thing to say.

  • @MoritzvonSchweinitz
    @MoritzvonSchweinitz 3 года назад +26

    The amazon reviews for the "1 million random numbers" book are hilarious!
    Another important aspect of this book if that it is a source of "no aces up my sleeve" random numbers: if I were to publish some research that requires random numbers, I can say "I am using random numbers starting at page X of the book", and other researchers can replicate my methods using the same, but still random, numbers.

    • @gteixeira
      @gteixeira 10 месяцев назад

      It is much easier to use a known pseudo-random formula with a seed. Any future experiment can just change the formula or the seed.

    • @tomkandy
      @tomkandy 5 месяцев назад

      @@gteixeira That's only true it we trust you not to have cherry picked the seed. In situations which are adversarial, like random numbers used in cryptographic algorithms, you need to prove you haven't generated something that weakens the algorithm. That's where the Rand numbers are useful, although using things like digits from pi is more common.

    • @gteixeira
      @gteixeira 5 месяцев назад

      @@tomkandy You can also cherry pick the page of the book, so it goes the same.

    • @tomkandy
      @tomkandy 5 месяцев назад

      @@gteixeira there's a lot less opportunity to cherry pick with a few hundred pages than with an entire 32bit or whatever seed

    • @gteixeira
      @gteixeira 5 месяцев назад

      @@tomkandy If there is any suspicion of seed tampering, then get one that no one will believe is tampered, like 0, 11, 69, 0xBADDAD, 0xFACED1CC, ...

  • @Andersl201
    @Andersl201 3 года назад +105

    If this book has even a single copy of itself, the numbers are no longer random. They would become the numbers of that book.

    • @kaboomwinn4026
      @kaboomwinn4026 3 года назад +8

      The number in book is different when the book is printed and not a copy of it self. The page can be at random order.

    • @rogehmarbi
      @rogehmarbi 3 года назад +5

      my head hurts bad now

    • @jeroenstrompf5064
      @jeroenstrompf5064 3 года назад

      What a wonderful idea!

    • @Plumbump
      @Plumbump 2 года назад +5

      It ceased to be random the moment someone finished proofreading it.

    • @jamescollier3
      @jamescollier3 2 года назад +1

      yes. thank you. lol right!!!

  • @pianomanhere
    @pianomanhere 3 года назад +10

    I heard it has a great cliffhanger in the middle, a climax 3/4 through and a great ending. As codified in a commonly-used book, the numbers are no longer random in practice, but merely in original plan and compilation.

  • @Alchemydude667
    @Alchemydude667 3 года назад +6

    Feels like a book like this would be a good double cipher. Cipher one translates to a page number and line, cipher two decodes the numbers into letters

  • @altoclef4249
    @altoclef4249 3 года назад +89

    The fact that the price is just 1$ off annoys me to death.

    • @CosmiaNebula
      @CosmiaNebula 3 года назад +39

      I agree, 67 is just better, since it's a prime number.

    • @chixenlegjo
      @chixenlegjo 3 года назад +5

      yeah I love primes.

    • @connorml
      @connorml 3 года назад +1

      @Janice Hajadi r/whoosh

    • @kkai8935
      @kkai8935 3 года назад +1

      the writer : oh sorry, i'll increase it for $351

    • @Zachyshows
      @Zachyshows 3 года назад

      @@kkai8935 increases by 2694
      BFDI reference that people probably won't get

  • @yesitsmojo24
    @yesitsmojo24 3 года назад +136

    Random number generator website: "Hold my beer"

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад +10

      I have held your beer and drank it. Oddly enough it tastes like a drink full of binary code.

    • @mghq-mobilegamerzhq2533
      @mghq-mobilegamerzhq2533 3 года назад +2

      Rand function, Figt me

    • @ETXAlienRobot201
      @ETXAlienRobot201 3 года назад +6

      i'm really surprised he didn't mention random.org, actually

    • @seansola6708
      @seansola6708 3 года назад +1

      Gordon: *"Where's the Lamb Sauce."*

  • @denn1222
    @denn1222 3 года назад +107

    He has the same name from the dork at Wendover Productions, Sam

    • @DerVolman
      @DerVolman 3 года назад +5

      Wow! That's amazing!

    • @denn1222
      @denn1222 3 года назад +1

      George W. Bush thanks bush

    • @Michael_Chater
      @Michael_Chater 3 года назад +1

      What a fascinating, unfavourable and influential discovery!

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад

      This discovery will change the world.

    • @anniversarynotice1838
      @anniversarynotice1838 3 года назад

      Today, October 2nd, is Senior Citizens' Day.
      It is a statutory anniversary established in 1997 with the aim of promoting national measures, along with awakening public interest in the issue of senior citizens. And it is also the birthday of Allingsong (Gk), a Liverpool soccer player

  • @nonyabissniss7526
    @nonyabissniss7526 3 года назад +36

    Philosophical question: since those numbers are printed in a book now, in an order, can they truly be called random anymore?

    • @phxcppdvlazi
      @phxcppdvlazi 2 года назад +3

      How is that a philosophical question? Yes, of course they're random, why wouldn't they be? Randomness is more a measure of entropy or signal-to-noise ratio. Not sure what weird definition of random you're using.

    • @mizlia
      @mizlia 2 года назад +7

      @@phxcppdvlazi I think what the original commenter was thinking of was more like uniqueness or novelty or unpredictability - concepts that are usually associated with randomness. If I were to use this book to create passwords or something, would those be harder or easier to guess than newly generated random passwords?

  • @Michaelonyoutub
    @Michaelonyoutub 3 года назад +10

    Reminds me of when I was working on research with my professor for one semester and I had to program in C a monte carlo simulation which requires millions and millions of random numbers and we had the problem of having to produce those random numbers. There is a default random number generator in C which produces random numbers but they are only really random when you look at any one individual number, when you use many consecutive random numbers some patterns can emerge which would make it no longer random. We had to use a new method of generating random numbers where we used a few random numbers from the default generator to seed our new generator which involved a more complex function to generate random numbers which wasn't as likely to have patterns over many consecutive numbers. Moral of the story, default randomness is pretty bad but randomness on top of randomness on top of randomness, can be good enough.

    • @Cutest-Bunny998
      @Cutest-Bunny998 3 года назад +3

      Yes the C++ default since I think like 1997 (or at least sometime in the 90s) uses a Mersenne Twister psuedorandom generator that is pretty flawed, and the C standard library uses a very flawed psuedorandom generator in most implementations of the specification. Most psuedorandom generators are also not properly seeded and as a result become even more predictable than the best-case scenario for that implementation of a generator. For anything needing a more random number series you want a random generator that relies on either a cryptographically secure psuedorandom generator whose cycle is longer than your use-case cares about/whose seed is from a more random source usually provided to you by the operating system, or if it's truly needed a truly random or effectively random equivalent hardware source can be exploited, including such things as audio recordings of atmospheric noise or user input based generation. The holy grail of random though is quantum phenomena like radioactive decay, which are the only real sources I'm aware of that cannot be considered psuedorandom (in terms of the pure theory of algorithmic determinism) because the Bell inequalities imply no hidden variables exist, which means that decay can be used safe from any prediction/inference attack, even by an attacker who knows the entire state of all content in all realities (likely an overestimation as just really knowing the entire state of reality within the light cone of the random generator, assuming superluminal information transfer is truly forbidden, is enough) to the maximum allowed/possible accuracy (that being incomplete since the Heisenberg uncertainty principle fundamentally means certain information about reality is mutually exclusive since momentum and position cannot both be measured to a high precision because quantum fields and the waves that move them can never support both values simultaneously independent of measurement) due to the decay being one example of what we believe is a non-deterministic quantum phenomena. Though, of course there is always a chance we are wrong about everything, so I'll add there is a that even quantum sources might have some weakness to this we just dont know about due to us having a fundamental misunderstanding about seemingly incontrovertible aspects of quantum phenomena.

  • @AVeryRandomPerson
    @AVeryRandomPerson 3 года назад +68

    Now I'm going to start all my random number sequences with 5, and exclude 1.

    • @samh151
      @samh151 3 года назад +2

      you madman

    • @aqdv25
      @aqdv25 3 года назад +5

      then its no longer really random because you have set constraints? it will now be easier to guess the numbers that you will pick, statistically speaking.

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад

      Then it is not random. Humans are truly bad at picking random numbers.

    • @disorganizedorg
      @disorganizedorg 3 года назад

      The lack of initial "1s" is related to Benford's Law, I'd guess.

    • @insightfultoaster2965
      @insightfultoaster2965 3 года назад +4

      @@aqdv25 Its a joke

  • @freezedeve3119
    @freezedeve3119 3 года назад +13

    Those numbers stopped being random numbers when they printed them as book.

  • @sagarock5528
    @sagarock5528 3 года назад +4

    Most random thing i heard today: being called idiot by HAI 2:33

  • @ethanlust6305
    @ethanlust6305 3 года назад +16

    you are one of the only channels that uses a rly clickbaity title yet the video always lives up to it

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад

      I don't think the video is living. It is not a living being.

    • @ethanlust6305
      @ethanlust6305 3 года назад +1

      Mamta Baranwal wow

  • @daandanx
    @daandanx 3 года назад +19

    4:09 OMG that guy is so quirky and *random!*

  • @cantstopthebear
    @cantstopthebear 3 года назад +22

    "Just as today's reddit memes can predict tomorrow's Instagram memes"

  • @kaiiorg
    @kaiiorg 3 года назад +41

    4:20: Expected ")", found "EOF"

  • @jackfromdublin8683
    @jackfromdublin8683 3 года назад +234

    “$68”
    *So close , yet so far*

    • @kingants4644
      @kingants4644 3 года назад +2

      Indeed

    • @kingants4644
      @kingants4644 3 года назад +8

      68.99 should be a closer price

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад +2

      I will sell it to you to the specific price. Just give me your credit card information.

    • @economicsinaction
      @economicsinaction 3 года назад +2

      I see you are a man of great culture

    • @Infomaniac_Moment
      @Infomaniac_Moment 3 года назад +3

      LAUGH IT'S THE FUNNY SEX NUMBER LAAAAUGH

  • @kakarroto007
    @kakarroto007 3 года назад +9

    The *Rand* company publishes a *Random* number book? How appropriate!

  • @dennism3586
    @dennism3586 3 года назад +6

    4:19 This snippet would spit out a syntax error as the parentheses are not matched up

  • @EMOTIONOGRAPHY
    @EMOTIONOGRAPHY 3 года назад +83

    "And yes, George Soros did pay me to tell that joke."
    How many Sorosbucks did you get? (Also, amazing joke.)

    • @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive
      @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive 3 года назад +1

      How does one apply for Soros bucks? The COVID hoax has been hard on my job.

    • @EMOTIONOGRAPHY
      @EMOTIONOGRAPHY 3 года назад +8

      @@MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive You're already ineligible.

  • @yokowan
    @yokowan 3 года назад +6

    i love how the russian text is just "some kind of russian name"

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад

      "Some kind of English name"

  • @daofficalbagelboi548
    @daofficalbagelboi548 3 года назад +6

    The RAND corporation sounds like some evil tech company in a superhero movie.

    • @Bacopa68
      @Bacopa68 3 года назад +1

      There's a reference to it in Dr Strangelove. They call it the BLAND corporation.

  • @DrewNorthup
    @DrewNorthup 3 года назад +8

    Put more succinctly, and correctly, no closed system can generate true randomness; randomness requires an unbiased open system.

    • @randomobserver8168
      @randomobserver8168 2 года назад

      Is the universe even an open system? And if our knowledge of it is sufficient even to answer that either way, and the answer it yes, is it the only open system?

  • @b33thr33kay
    @b33thr33kay 3 года назад +27

    4:16 Aaargh, close that parenthesis!

  • @hi_melnikov
    @hi_melnikov 3 года назад +28

    As a какое-то русское имя I am offended by you not spelling my name correct

  • @fqidz
    @fqidz 3 года назад +15

    The author who used the google number generator to write his book:

    • @zman90
      @zman90 3 года назад +5

      I hate you for being called "N" and profile is of m

  • @niharoad4483
    @niharoad4483 3 года назад

    Loved that Wendover Production mention❤️

  • @artstsym
    @artstsym 2 года назад +1

    My 101 STATS book had about 4 pages of random numbers at the back; it was genuinely pretty exciting the first time I realized this.

  • @Omar-cw5gg
    @Omar-cw5gg 3 года назад +3

    4:25 Half as Interesting has become wholesome Chungus 100

  • @giosworkshop475
    @giosworkshop475 3 года назад +51

    *PROCEEDS TO SELL PI*

    • @TheNamesSnek
      @TheNamesSnek 3 года назад +13

      technically, that entire book is contained within the digits of pi

    • @fakestory1753
      @fakestory1753 3 года назад

      @@TheNamesSnek that is not true

    • @SFSAtlas
      @SFSAtlas 3 года назад +4

      @@fakestory1753 are you sure

    • @fakestory1753
      @fakestory1753 3 года назад

      @@SFSAtlas no , but if one knowledge themselves something like BBP formula , it will actually help understand how can you solve a problem(more efficiently) like this
      rather than just claiming something without proof

    • @Someone-ej7kd
      @Someone-ej7kd 3 года назад

      @@TheNamesSnek hmm ok

  • @NolePTR
    @NolePTR 3 года назад +1

    Again, voltage tube fluctuations can be used today for random number generation. Or radioactive decay. All you need is some sensor that's prone to error (an unfiltered sensor), to generate them.

  • @bazoo513
    @bazoo513 3 года назад +1

    As you mentioned, for the vast majority of uses a pseudo-random number generator will do. For the vast majority of _remaining_ applications (such as gambling machines or seeds for generating PKI key pairs) just a bit of additional entropy is needed, such as a human reaction time, hand tremor or somesuch (for example, PGP key generator asks the user to move a mouse around or type some random characters - of course, the _timing_ of keystrokes is used, not characters themselves). The only application that comes to mind where true randomness would come handy is one-time pad cryptography with large key size.
    And nowadays, for most applications one million digits is far too little.

  • @comradesmile
    @comradesmile 3 года назад +3

    This book: *exist*
    Nhentai sauce finders: it’s free real estate

  • @sergei_gruntovsky
    @sergei_gruntovsky 3 года назад +6

    Modern computers absolutely CAN generate a true random numbers, which are used when the predictability can cause security issues.
    Google /dev/random vs. /dev/urandom

    • @ReaperUnreal
      @ReaperUnreal 3 года назад +5

      Ehhhhhh, kinda sorta. It really depends on how you measure what you mean by random. Cryptographic random functions pass a suite of tests that guarantee that it's random enough. Whether or not that constitutes "true" randomness is basically a philosophical debate at that point, but the argument could be made that because it was generated by an algorithm and not a non-deterministic process that it's not "truly" random. That's where hardware random number generators come in, they'll measure something like shot noise, photon quantum effects, nuclear decay, things that are definitely non-deterministic. Those have an issue in that the events can have biases, but there's really complicated math that I don't fully understand that can combine sources of randomness to get rid of bias.
      So you can kind of see where the "sorta kinda" comes from. It depends on how you define "true random."

    • @sergei_gruntovsky
      @sergei_gruntovsky 3 года назад +3

      @@ReaperUnreal yep, exactly. /dev/random requires a certain amount of entropy (hardware rng), and otherwise blocks, waiting for it. It is as close to "true" random as that book (which also basically takes the data from a hardware rng).

    • @qingyangzhang6093
      @qingyangzhang6093 3 года назад +1

      the problem with these is they are too slow for many uses, and people would rather take pictures of lava lamps to generate randomness instead

    • @sergei_gruntovsky
      @sergei_gruntovsky 3 года назад +1

      @@qingyangzhang6093 true :)
      Still better than a book though.

  • @TakeWalker
    @TakeWalker 3 года назад +1

    I love the stock videos they use in these things. Take, for example, the one that's supposed to suggest being chained to a computer. Ignoring the fact that there is no obvious lock on the chain, it extends from one of the man's wrists to the other. He's not actually chained to anything whatsoever, he just can't move his hands more than a foot or so apart. He can get up and leave at any time! And yet it somehow conveys a message.

    • @johnladuke6475
      @johnladuke6475 3 года назад

      My takeaway from the stock footage is that every nerd in the world is a pretty girl, but you can tell she's a nerd because she wears glasses or owns a big book, or maybe both.

  • @jonadabtheunsightly
    @jonadabtheunsightly 3 года назад +1

    Not sure about the other applications, but for cryptography, you absolutely positively must not use random numbers that have been published or previously used. It would completely annihilate any pretense of Perfect Forward Secrecy. You need fresh, secret, previously unknown and unused random numbers.

  • @danielwright4987
    @danielwright4987 3 года назад +3

    As an engineering student I normally pay twice that for a book full of numbers

  • @RedFlag12
    @RedFlag12 3 года назад +4

    If the numbers were 6 digits, this could be a book of the “holy numbers”

    • @kawabatayuri
      @kawabatayuri 3 года назад +1

      YESSS, But its quite risky tho, because u could get a degenerate genre

  • @user-rj4vr2sc2d
    @user-rj4vr2sc2d 2 года назад +1

    1. Take a 10-sided dice
    2. Put it on a plate with a rod attached at the bottom
    3. Attach the rod to a motor and have it randomly shoot the dice up in the air
    4. Scan the number
    Boom. Random number machine.

  • @KobKoi
    @KobKoi 3 года назад +1

    I know this book, its quite handy for encoding samples on consumer tests with some 3-digit codes. Surely you could just make 3x 3-digit codes that _look_ random for 3 test samples, but eventually there will be some sort unconscious formula that you're following without even realising it.
    Its lot easier, better, and quicker (which is most important thing and the most surprising part for some that its actually quicker), to just open this book randomly, point your finger somewhere, and just use the numbers which are there.

    • @AliceDTRH_
      @AliceDTRH_ 2 года назад

      Doesn't "opening the book randomly" defeat the purpose of trying to get random numbers? You might still have an inherent bias in where you're getting the numbers from.

  • @jeremychan9799
    @jeremychan9799 3 года назад +3

    HAI: we all know what will happen next, the couple reunites...
    Me who just finished Noughts and Crosses:
    *surprised pikachu face*

  • @123sendodo4
    @123sendodo4 3 года назад +4

    You could maybe talk about how everyone in the universe could violate the Hong Kong national security law

  • @howdyhamster
    @howdyhamster 3 года назад +1

    3:20 "No wait, you weren't suppose[sic] to find out about this super secret code!!!"

  • @jsl151850b
    @jsl151850b 3 года назад +1

    Fun Fact: Robby the Robot's *second* film appearance was for the somewhat juvenile SciFi movie 'The Invisible Boy'. One of the meetings that the grownups were having was to determine the next project for their super computer. Random numbers table was a candidate project. Not a bad guess for 1957.

  • @Waiel
    @Waiel 3 года назад +4

    Or you could just say “hey Siri, give me a random number”

  • @claytonp.4725
    @claytonp.4725 3 года назад +29

    "George Sorros paid me to say this" earned the like by itself

  • @shargo498
    @shargo498 3 года назад

    The best thing about this channel is your horrible jokes
    I love it

  • @dan-tv1kp
    @dan-tv1kp 3 года назад

    There are a bunch of secure RNGs online. I know of one that measures observed zero-point energy in a vacuum, one that performs permutations on the data of highly variable video feeds, and some really good psuedo-RNGs involving large feedback shift register networks. If you don't feel comfortable using ones on the inet, just generate a whole bunch of them, and XOR them.
    Still would be cool to have a book w/ random numbers guaranteed secure by RAND Corp. though.
    Oh, and the standard deviates thing is a neat feature.

  • @rparl
    @rparl 3 года назад +3

    When I went to MIT, we all bought the Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. It was very thick, even though it was printed on extremely thin paper. Since it was published by the Chemical Rubber Company, we called it the CRC book. Much later they realized that the Mathematics portion was the really popular part and came out with the CRC Mathematical Tables, which I also bought, as it was so much more convenient. I still recall the many pages of both base 10 and natural logarithms. This was way before hand calculators.

  • @ludwig4029
    @ludwig4029 3 года назад +3

    read the title as "why a book of 68 random numbers sells for $1 million"

  • @peteraleksandrovich5923
    @peteraleksandrovich5923 Год назад +1

    Figuring out how to predict a slot machine isn't stealing, it's figuring out the game.

  • @Priyajit_Ghosh
    @Priyajit_Ghosh 3 года назад +1

    Interviewer: Tell me a 6 digit Number
    Me: 177013
    Interviewer: You are hired.

  • @parzh
    @parzh 3 года назад +5

    4:35 "Steal millions from casinos" - yeah, except it was $250,000 bucks in a week

    • @askreddit2431
      @askreddit2431 3 года назад

      Ten weeks 2.5 millions?

    • @parzh
      @parzh 3 года назад

      @@askreddit2431 I mean, the whole endeavor was going on for only one week

  • @liambohl
    @liambohl 3 года назад +3

    Syntax error: unmatched '(' on line 4:20
    Warning: unused variable "variable"

  • @piedrostone4246
    @piedrostone4246 3 года назад

    4:07 VERY important. Thank you for including.

  • @zues121510
    @zues121510 3 года назад

    Hey, Sam.
    What's inside had a question about used bricks on his newest video about the Boring Company brick so I thought I would try to refer you to him.

  • @carbonn9172
    @carbonn9172 3 года назад +33

    The chances of seeing 69 or 420 in there must be impossible

    • @bragapedro
      @bragapedro 3 года назад +3

      Hmm... No? Since it is (supposed to be) truly random, it can happen

    • @carbonn9172
      @carbonn9172 3 года назад

      @@bragapedro Good point

    • @harsh3624
      @harsh3624 3 года назад

      The chances of you being born are one in a trillion yet it happened. ; )

    • @greenbin3028
      @greenbin3028 3 года назад

      @@harsh3624 i wish i was unluckier

    • @avi8365
      @avi8365 3 года назад +6

      Chances of seeing 69 randomly at one glance=1%
      Chances of seeing 420 in a random glance= 0.1%
      If you have taken 100 glances then chances of seeing
      69= 63.4%
      420= 9.6%
      In 1000 glances
      69= 99.996%
      420= 63.3%
      So not impossible

  • @pugz3230
    @pugz3230 3 года назад +3

    Fun fact: There is a quantum random number generator at a university in Australia.

  • @aidansunbury9341
    @aidansunbury9341 3 года назад

    The humor is by far the best part of the video

  • @catholiccontriversy
    @catholiccontriversy 2 года назад +1

    I find that last part about "the book of random numbers in not the random numbers we thought they were, maybe even more random than originally thought" made me laugh more than it should have. I think it's because I had to do random sampling as part of a project in college and my professor kept rejecting my methodology because the way I was assigning randomness was not random enough.

  • @gustavofring4788
    @gustavofring4788 3 года назад +9

    Who would win?
    An expensive book
    or
    import random

  • @jonasdatlas4668
    @jonasdatlas4668 3 года назад +5

    How random! I love it.

  • @ashmanideep6253
    @ashmanideep6253 3 года назад +1

    **INTENSE COMPUTING OF DIGITS OF PI IN BACKGROUND AND PICKING RANDOM NUMBER WITH RANDOM DIGITS**

  • @jst7714
    @jst7714 3 года назад +1

    "Under direction you granted me as director of weapons research and development, Mr President, I conducted a study by the BLAND Corporation about a doomsday device..." - Dr. Strangelove

    • @Bacopa68
      @Bacopa68 3 года назад +1

      "...not a practical deterrent for reasons which at this moment must be all too obvious. "

  • @somniad
    @somniad 3 года назад +9

    "steal millions from casinos"
    It's only considered "stealing" because casinos want people to see it that way. He understood the world and leveraged that knowledge. It's hard for that to ever be cheating.
    Good video besides, though! Thanks for all the neat stuff.

    • @larkwong7925
      @larkwong7925 3 года назад +1

      that is the definition of cheating in most casinos. pretty absurd world we live in tsk tsk tsk

    • @somniad
      @somniad 3 года назад

      @@larkwong7925 indeed. It's an incomprehensible definition.

  • @sammythebest9520
    @sammythebest9520 3 года назад +42

    why did I click on this

    • @jaredsnow6557
      @jaredsnow6557 3 года назад +3

      Because you have to

    • @fortune3911
      @fortune3911 3 года назад

      Because you have hands

    • @KingHarkinianMah21
      @KingHarkinianMah21 3 года назад +2

      To find out why a book of a million random numbers sells for $68, obviously

  • @frackert
    @frackert 3 года назад +1

    "Lava lamps", I'm pretty sure this is what Cloudflare uses for encryption keys. Very cool

  • @harmankhinda2256
    @harmankhinda2256 Год назад +1

    In computational physics we talked about this specific book or maybe a like book and the amazon review for it were hillarious.

  • @whatbizarreactisthecaninep791
    @whatbizarreactisthecaninep791 3 года назад +6

    just sounds like a collection of nhentai goodies.

  • @JPTQJR
    @JPTQJR 3 года назад +7

    As soon as I heard Rand i knew this video was about Statistics

    • @hannesproductions4302
      @hannesproductions4302 3 года назад

      Ayn Rand...

    • @jackwtanderson4679
      @jackwtanderson4679 3 года назад

      Could you not tell by the title of the video that it was about statistics?

    • @JPTQJR
      @JPTQJR 3 года назад

      @@jackwtanderson4679 It's been a long while since I saw this book for Statistics class so I forgot the title of the book

  • @adrianTNT
    @adrianTNT 3 года назад +1

    On an Arduino board, it advises you to include electrical "noise" from a free pin, in order to get more randomness. I found it interesting.
    Computers can't really create randomness by themselves (as the video said).

    • @lennartplaga9056
      @lennartplaga9056 2 года назад

      Modern CPUs usually have a source of randomness built in, which works similar to the thing with the tubes back then. It's typically used to generate seeds for pseudorandom number generators or cryptographic keys rather than filling books with numbers, but it works just as well.

  • @Animotion1000
    @Animotion1000 3 года назад

    "Charmingly shadowy" I love it.