Julius Andrae and Sons New Facts for Farmers About Telephones Catalog Number 14

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Process Notes

  • I used NAPS2 to scan and run OCR on this catalog
  • NAPS2 is buggy. I had to restart the scanner / NAPS2 several times. One time I had to restart my laptop
  • NAPS2 will do OCR at the time of save off of the PDF document.  Now I understand why the name implies PDF centric existence.

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111111 East Caney Branch Rd Campton KY 41301

Beautiful 25+- acres of land (closer to 50 acres but the deed says 25 so we have to legally say 25) with an abundance of wildlife! It would be a great place to four wheel as there are trails established. There is an old barn and also a house that has fallen in. Seller states there was gas on the property and the first two seams of coal have been removed. Realtor name is Debbie Allen with Century21, 606 477 3403 or 859 624 5488. https://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/111111-E-Caney-Branch-Rd_Campton_KY_41301_M98655-98852

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Quantum Mechanics Money from Knots

An attempt at money using quantum mechanics. Saw a note to the effect there is some flaw. IIRC


 

Presented by Edward Farhi. Money, either in the form of bills or information on a computer, should be impossible to copy and also verifiable as good money when tendered to a merchant. Quantum mechanics may make this possible to achieve with far greater security than can be achieved without quantum mechanics. Quantum money is a cryptographic protocol in which a mint can produce a quantum state, no one else can copy the state, and anyone (with a quantum computer) can verify that the state came from the mint without sending the money back to the mint. I will present a concrete quantum money scheme based on quantum superpositions of diagrams that encode knots. This scheme is hopefully secure against computationally bounded adversaries. This may be the basis of E-commerce on a future quantum internet which would not require communication with a central server such as the credit card company, PayPal or Google Checkout.

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NonTransitive Dice

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Consider the following set of dice.

  • Die A has sides 2, 2, 4, 4, 9, 9.
  • Die B has sides 1, 1, 6, 6, 8, 8.
  • Die C has sides 3, 3, 5, 5, 7, 7.

The probability that A rolls a higher number than B, the probability that B rolls higher than C, and the probability that C rolls higher than A are all 5/9, so this set of dice is nontransitive. In fact, it has the even stronger property that, for each die in the set, there is another die that rolls a higher number than it more than half the time.

Now, consider the following game, which is played with a set of dice.

  1. The first player chooses a die from the set.
  2. The second player chooses one die from the remaining dice.
  3. Both players roll their die; the player who rolls the higher number wins.

If this game is played with a transitive set of dice, it is either fair or biased in favor of the first player, because the first player can always find a die that will not be beaten by any other dice more than half the time. If it is played with the set of dice described above, however, the game is biased in favor of the second player, because the second player can always find a die that will beat the first player's die with probability 5/9. The following tables show all possible outcomes for all 3 pairs of dice.

Player 1 chooses die A
Player 2 chooses die C
  Player 1 chooses die B
Player 2 chooses die A
  Player 1 chooses die C
Player 2 chooses die B

C \ A

2 4 9

A / B

1 6 8

B​ / C

3 5 7
3 C A A 2 A B B 1 C C C
5 C C A 4 A B B 6 B B C
7 C C A 9 A A A 8 B B B