Sentences with phrase «random shared number»

Not exact matches

Terms and conditions — The giveaway will run from October 1st until October 31st A winner will be chosen at random using the rafflecopter The number and flavour of pouches will be chosen by Piccolo The winner will be emailed by Naptime Natter and their details will be shared with Piccolo Piccolo are responsible for posting the prize to the chosen winner Open to UK entrants only
I just wanted to check in and share some random thoughts... posts have been sporadic lately and I think number one...
In order to properly use Monte Carlo in retirement planning, dozens to hundreds of inputs need to change to reach a Real World probability number: Life expectancy, age of retirement, investment payouts, yields vs. share selling, investment returns, inflation, income goals, Social Security, all of the types of taxes, pension payouts, annual cash flow surpluses and deficits, random earned incomes, replacing vehicles every ten years, allocation mix changes over time; and then duplicate all of that for every investment individually, then for the spouse, then account for all of that compounding in every year, and the list goes on and on.
In co-op there's: Today's Pick, which is a set of random challenges that change on a daily basis; Annihilation, which has you clearing a set number of marbles before time runs out; Colour Split, similar to Annihilation but each player is assigned just one colour; and Co-Pilot, whereby two players share a cannon with player one firing the marbles and player two piloting angle.
As the performers moved about the space in a random pattern of loose choreography, they sang the lines: «Who say you have to be a dead dog... One is the loneliest number that you'll ever do... And it comes down, it comes down, well it comes down, and it comes down, it comes it comes... Scores of blood and fire and freeways, I am going to get my share... One is the loneliest number that you'll ever do... Who say you have to be a dead dog...» Handling each other's bodies with as much regard as the set's props, the performers alternate between a cappella and in - the - round chorus, fugue and eventually total discordance, rising as high as Math Bass as she climbs to the top of the ladder supported by her full cast in order to smash the plant and end the performance.
An interesting question is whether mistakes are random events or if a number of papers share common flaws of logic or methodology.
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