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		<title>Tools that I use in this hobby</title>
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		<description>hypersoniq's Blog: Tools that I use in this hobby</description>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Tools that I use in this hobby</title>
			<link>/blogentry/194827</link>
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			<pubDate>Mon, 29 Sep 2025 02:30:47 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>hypersoniq</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>1. spread sheet!<br /><br />Ever since getting into this hobby going on 3 decades ago, the main go to tool for developing ideas has been and continues to be a spreadsheet. I use Microsoft Excel every day at work, but at home I use the free Open Office Calc spreadsheet... it does most of the same functions and formulas... and it&#x27;s free.<br /><br />2. Dia.<br /><br />This is a free program that lets you create both flowcharts for program flow AND entity relationship diagrams for data base work.I learned of (and used) this when taking classes.<br /><br />3. Python!<br /><br />While my first language was G BASIC on a Radio Shack TRS-80, my favorite of all time is Python. It is free, well documented, has a deep user base and I can follow the logic. I am not a user of virtual environments because these lottery scripts are stand alone. I use all of the math and science libraries available, also freely available.<br /><br />4. R Studio.<br /><br />This is a statistics based program that I learned about in class and kept using after graduation. Easy to generate visualizations of data, and work flow can be incorporated into python and vice versa. Free (Open Source).<br /><br />5. Pencil and Paper.<br /><br />True classics never go out of style!<br /><br />6. Texas Instruments Nspire graphing scientific calculator.<br /><br />Bought to take calculus, kept for it&#x27;s power and relative ease of use.<br /><br />7. Computers...<br /><br />First is an old laptop with a quad core I7 bought when starting school, now 9 years old<br /><br />Second, a Raspberry Pi 5 with 8GB of RAM running Linux. Both set up with Python and I can run long programs on the RasPi and send the data back to the windows laptop. (Those rare tests that take days to complete...)<br /><br />Nothing was purchased with the lottery hobby in mind, but through that hobby, I am able to keep using the software and hardware and not forget everything I learned in school.... ALL of the software is open source, so it is free. I could never imagine paying for lottery software, that defeats the purpose of the hobby... hits (and even playing at all) is secondary to the thrill of discovery.... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/194827">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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