Here's a semi-useful bit of knowledge that might prove to be more useful later on. Intuitor's site on binary counting has information on how to count with your fingers not only to ten but to 35, 99, 255, and even 1,023. It took me a while to get a hang of the system. The key is to change the base. In a decimal system (base 10), you only have room for one placeholder, ten digits represent ten units. In binary, you've got ten placeholders. Each finger by being up or down can represent a one or a zero.




As you might have figured out, four, 20, and other numbers are relatively not safe for work.
Just remember that each increase in a place holder is an increase in magnitude, and you've pretty much got it down. Here are the orders of magnitude in binary finger counting:
right pinky, 1
right ring, 2
right middle, 4
right index, 8
right thumb 16
left thumb, 32
left index, 64
left middle, 128,
left ring, 256
left pinky, 512.
To figure out what a big number is, just check to see whether a finger is up or down, zero or one, on or off.

(512 x 1) plus (64 x 1) plus (32 x 1) plus (1 x 1) equals 609. Rock on, or as we say in the binary finger counting world, "585."
Posted by mastr at December 16, 2004 09:46 AM