Wrong, But Useful: Episode 3
/podcasts/wbu3.mp3
It’s the awkward third episode! In which…
- @sr_cav (who is Cav in real life) is nice about us on his blog
 - Dave meets Art Benjamin
    
- Art Benjamin’s TED talks about mathemagic and statistics
 - Rüdiger Gamm’s mental arithmetic
 - Secrets of the mathematical ninja
 
 - Colin invites you to MathsJam - Yarnfield Park, Stone, November 2/3rd 2013
 - Dave does a stats exam and lectures Colin about what counts as an exam
 - Colin and the maths police investigate whether Nakamoto and Mochizuki are the same person:
    
- Axes to Axes at the Aperiodical
 - Ted Nelson on the two
 - Shinichi Mochizuki and the ABC conjecture
 - Nakamoto and bitcoin
 - JGAAP - authorship attribution. (Thanks to @_TK_O, who is Tanya Osborne in real life.)
 
 - Dave stamps down on simultaneous word equations
 - Colin applies maths in the garden: \(V = \\frac{\\pi}{3}\\left(R^2 + Rr + r^2\\right)h\)
 - Dave lowers the tone and Colin tries to rescue it with a Fibonacci half-marathon
 - Then literature! Feynman Point Pilish Poetry ((Correction: Feynman would have been 95 this month, not 99 as Colin says.)) The Feynman point is at digit 762 of $\pi$. Thanks to @giftedmaths, who is Richard Mankiewicz in real life.
 - Dave listens to the Aperiodicast ((Oops)) All Squared and wonders why some times are more attractive than others.
 - @notonlyahatrack (who is Will Davies in real life) answered last month’s puzzle and had it featured on @haggismaths’s What’s on my blackboard blog.
 - This month’s puzzle: An equilateral triangle and a regular hexagon have the same perimeter. The triangle has an area of 2; what is the area of the hexagon?
 - This month’s confusion: what’s the difference between a chart, a graph, a figure and a picture?