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Can math and logic improve chances of winning a jackpot?
What Jammy fails to realize is that things can be BOTH ways, random AND non-random at the same time. With the exception of the very first pick-3 drawing, there is a 65.7% chance at least one of the digits from the previous drawing will repeat. There is 72% chance all three digits will be different too. The reason it is a random drawing is because only one three digit number will be drawn, but that doesn't change the fact that number will either be 1 of 720 numbers or 1 of 280 numbers. Does
Jul 8, 2013, 3:23 pm - Stack47 - Mathematics Forum

Can math and logic improve chances of winning a jackpot?
The Rolling Cash5 1 in 9 means 11.1% of all the combinations match at least 2 numbers and if QPs are sold like raffle tickets, 63,973 tickets will match at least 2 numbers for every 575,757 tickets they sell. It also means if you purchase 18 QPs every day for a week, you should average 2 wins per day. Of those 14 wins , you'll probably match 2 numbers 13 times and have one 3 number match and a net loss. It's the losing tickets that drag you down. If the 1 in 9 ratio is the best you can g
Mar 15, 2013, 1:09 pm - Stack47 - Mathematics Forum

Some new results on some old techniques.
Hello, greenfox, ok, I'll give one more example, then make a list Even and odd and another list low high Greenfox'm noticing this pattern mainly of even and odd Sure bjetivo is the pair of pick3 in the last draw gave the pair in the sector Pair (0,2,4,6,8) does not play next in this sector, need to see the analysis of this pattern From a drawing to another, change the location of the pair pick3, since the sector high and low switching pair of pick3 a raffle to another is not as fr
Mar 7, 2013, 12:57 pm - dr san - Mathematics Forum

The Wave Matrix - Excel 2007 Addin
JADE hello, what I mean about standards, are the most basic example a basic pattern of splitting a lottery of 49/6 into 4 groups one group will number zero or one, and another two or more in 100% of any raffle, so if you play two numbers in the group of zero or a number go wrong and if you play a number the group will give two numbers will also miss then as it is not known which group terms do in 4 editions, ie we have to find a rotational formula, to go against padr o.outro de
Dec 9, 2012, 2:47 pm - dr san - Mathematics Forum

Is there any site for an Odds/Even Analyzer?
Their frequencies are higher, because there are more of them. If you only played 2 odds, 3 evens, and I only played 0 odds/ 5 evens, your group would hit more, because your group has more number combinations overall. If we both have the same budget we have the same odds. But even theoretically - if you played ever 2O/3E and I played every 0O/5E then even though you'd hit the JP more often, I'd play less numbers overall. The % column in your example indicates the percent of combin
Aug 30, 2011, 10:39 am - Boney526 - Mathematics Forum

Global Lottery Solutions (G.L.S)
You posted some interesting information but my problem is when you said We must be seriously naive and brain-dead to think it is random . How can we give your math any credibility when you ignored the simple math of lotto/gambling games? Don't you know the odds always favor the house? The cash value of the next Mega Millions drawing will be around $16 million but that includes $37.8 million already collected from the two previous drawings plus another estimated $20 million that will be played
Jan 1, 2010, 2:07 pm - Stack47 - Mathematics Forum

How do I prove my state lottery's CGNs are fixed?
If you also see four 5's and multiples of it and by that i mean if you see 5, 15, 20, 30, and then a number, and if you see this appear 2 times in less than 3 months, then your game is rigged.. Excluding the power ball, there are 14,520 combinations with 4 numbers with multiples of 5 and you could expect to see it happen once out of every 250 drawings. I did a quick look back to January 2006 and couldn't find where that happened once so maybe it's due. And since it should average two hits i
Jun 21, 2008, 8:24 pm - Stack47 - Mathematics Forum

Mathematics and the Lottery
You said so yourself, only a few managed to show a profit. Let's say 250 out of 25,000 or 1%. Run it again, go another 5 years, and only 2.5 survive this time. We'll say it's 3. A few is 0.1% of all wagers the lottery expects to lose. Had the winnings been equally distributed, each player lost 50% of their total bet. Because the rules of the simulation required each player to continue wagering $5 to win $500 regardless of how much they had lost, some players continued to lose and lost more
Sep 9, 2013, 8:04 pm - Stack47 - Mathematics Forum

Artificial Intelligence
RL, I suspect you didn't take my advice above and study the Gambler's Fallacy at wikipedia. You also need to understand the concepts of Variance, Standard Deviation, and Confidence Intervals. All of your comments above refer to short term results and based solidly in your belief in the Gambler's Fallacy. If you REALLY believe a particular game system in your state is currently biased one way or another, you should contact your state Representatives and call for an investigation! Before you
Jul 21, 2010, 2:20 pm - jimmy4164 - Mathematics Forum

Combinatorics & Modus Tollens
So I managed another whopping dollar win. I didn't want to do a multi-draw this time using the same line, so I kind tried to use logic of what seemed to be evolving to gently modify my line over time. I went low tech for this with some graph paper. My expection was that a minimum of three numbers were going to eventually appear in Group1. [1-13] My first logic for Oct 17 was that two last digit 8's were going to come out. This would be akin to in pick 3 where I might think a double 8 was goi
Oct 26, 2020, 7:30 pm - JeetKuneDoLotto - Mathematics Forum

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