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    Travels in a Mathematical World

    Ed & me

    By Peter Rowlett. Posted October 3, 2010

    Here’s an update. If you didn’t read ‘Is Ed Miliband a “maths geek”?‘ now is a good time. So I didn’t get a reply from Ed, nor from anyone with concrete knowledge of his maths geek status. (Though I am grateful to @ColinTGraham, @MitchKeller, @Tysess and @stecks for re-tweeting my question to him.) But here…

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    Travels in a Mathematical World

    Is Ed Miliband a "maths geek"?

    By Peter Rowlett. Posted September 27, 2010

    In an article “Ed Miliband: Self-confessed maths ‘geek’ with a talent for diplomacy”, the Telegraph claimed the new leader of the opposition is a “self-confessed maths ‘geek’” but where, I wondered, did he “confess” it? James Grime adds a corollary: what did he mean by ‘maths geek’, anyway? In other words, we are asking, is…

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    Travels in a Mathematical World

    How I wish I could calculate #pihunt

    By Peter Rowlett. Posted September 15, 2010

    Today I spent an enjoyable time at Pi-hunting – the story of a mathematical obsession, run by the British Society for the History of Mathematics (BSHM) at the British Science Festival 2010. Part of this included a presentation by Noel-Ann Bradshaw on mnemonics to remember the digits of pi. An example is the following: How…

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    Travels in a Mathematical World

    Dear all: Change of job, email

    By Peter Rowlett. Posted September 9, 2010

    I just sent this message as an email to a list of people I know but haven’t told my new address to yet. This included my email address which, if you didn’t receive this and need to know it, you can pick up on the MSOR Network HE STEM webpage. I am no longer working…

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    Travels in a Mathematical World

    Prime birthdays: James Grime phenomenon

    By Peter Rowlett. Posted September 1, 2010

    In working out prime birthdays, James Grime remarked that his 1331th prime birthday would be “extra special”, and left it to his followers to work out why. The answer, of course, is that it is also his annual birthday. This is an interesting phenomenon: when he is 10957 days old, James Grime will also be…

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    Travels in a Mathematical World

    Prime birthdays via Wolfram|Alpha

    By Peter Rowlett. Posted August 29, 2010

    Recently on Twitter, Matt Parker (standupmaths) and James Grime (jamesgrime) were having a “nerd slamdown” working out next prime birthdays. This is the next date when the number of days since you were born is a prime. Here’s how to work this out in Wolfram|Alpha. For the purposes of this example, let’s choose an arbitrary…

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    Travels in a Mathematical World

    On the Decline of Mathematical Studies, and ever was it so

    By Peter Rowlett. Posted August 22, 2010

    When I started taking an interest in university mathematics teaching back in 2003/4, I quickly became aware of a report “Measuring the Mathematics Problem” (2000; also the 1995 Tackling the Mathematics Problem). This describes a decline in standards of students entering university and looks to serve as a call to arms to take action to…

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