Nathan Davis writes, "When you shuffle a deck, it rearranges the order of the cards and I got wondering what that looked like. I took a deck of physical cards, wrote 1 through 52 on each one, shuffled them, then wrote down that sequence. I wrote up a visualization program to show how it changes and made a short video showing off the patterns."
Monday, 7 October 2019
Popular Posts
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
If you follow the high weirdness that is American civics, you may have heard that the Supreme Court just ruled that states can prohibit ...
-
From NASA Goddard: When NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft arrived at asteroid Bennu in December 2018, its close-up images confirmed wha...
-
https://youtu.be/i4YQRLQVixM The Vietnamese security company Bkav says that a prototype mask costing $150 can reliably defeat Apple's ...
-
A while back I posted a link to a Kickstarter campaign for Orangered 's notebook called the BetterBook, which has an aspect ratio that m...
-
Robin Ince, co-host of the Book Shambles podcast, says he has at least 20 times more books than he can possibly read in his lifetime. Yet ...
-
I was introduced to this young woman's amazing projects through Becky Stern's Big List of Women Makers on YouTube . I've bee...
-
I have a few multimeters, and this is the one I usually grab first because it's so dead simple to use. I've had it for a least a ye...
-
Talking Paper was oddly similar to CueCat . A recorded message up to 50 seconds long is printed onto a photo or postcard as matrix barcode....
-
Tumblr user Svzannebrown shared this utterly delightful video, noting that it’s “all that anyone needs to know” about her time in Japan. ...
Powered by Blogger.