@Nine early computers frequently used 9- or 18-bit words
@Felthry gonna go with 11 bit multiples then :D
@Nine there's nothing stopping you i guess
@Nine are you familiar with the concept of numbers having a unique prime factorization?
@Felthry only in so far as I know that prime numbers are a thing that exist but I have no idea of how they work exactly
@Nine okay when i have more spoons (and if you're willing) i need to teach you some math
@Felthry Honestly my maths brain long since degraded years ago and I find it hard to remember a lot of ocncepts of it. I used to like it a lot but after my a-levels my brain just turned to mush on it ;; thank youy tho!
@Nine a-levels?
@Felthry uhh, not sure what the non UK equivalent is um...
so like... we do GCSEs at like... age... 15-16 I think?, then we do two years more of study for our A-level examinations which are the qualificiations you need to go into a university, or were, because now we have AS-levels which are like A-levels but ... not as 'good'?? and also vocational qualifications too which are directly linked to job types which are more valuable these days too I guess?...
@Nine GCSEs???
okay but i'm getting that it's like an entrance exam to a university or something I guess
@Nine here in the US you go through elementary school (primary school to UK people) and then middle school and high school (secondary school to UK people) and then at the end you get your high school diploma, and then depending on what university you apply to you may have to take an entrance exam to get into it but that's all handled by the university itself
then once you get your bachelor's degree you can take the GRE, which is kind of a standard entrance exam to graduate schools
@Felthry heck I have no idea what the equivalents are elsewhere @_@;;
@Nine basically just know that it's mathematically provable--quite easily, too--that any number you start with will show that same pattern when you start multiplying by two repeatedly
@Felthry that makes sense to be honest, it follows for all numbers you multiply something by providing the number you're multiplying by remains the same
@Felthry I'm acutally kinda staggered how often that shows up, I'd just never even realised it would and now I'm seeing it everywhere and it's kinda blowing my mind