Editing Talk:1155: Kolmogorov Directions

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Let's hope the directions recipient is walking the 1 to 4 blocks East if that means a Westbound car traffic only street.  If in a section with an infinite loop, who's the ideal character to be a victim of Cueball's perverse joke?  I have seen a real GPS route away from the destination, where driving across a creek would be required to follow bad GPS routing.  [[Special:Contributions/69.161.108.98|69.161.108.98]] 06:34, 3 January 2013 (UTC)
 
Let's hope the directions recipient is walking the 1 to 4 blocks East if that means a Westbound car traffic only street.  If in a section with an infinite loop, who's the ideal character to be a victim of Cueball's perverse joke?  I have seen a real GPS route away from the destination, where driving across a creek would be required to follow bad GPS routing.  [[Special:Contributions/69.161.108.98|69.161.108.98]] 06:34, 3 January 2013 (UTC)
βˆ’
: This is the most bizarrely incomprehensible passage I've ever read. Hats off to you sir. [[Special:Contributions/162.158.255.86|162.158.255.86]] 22:30, 10 November 2015 (UTC)
 
  
 
I would have thought that Randall meant the town of Lexington, Massachusetts, since he is lives in this area, and there's a Munroe Cemetery. The problem is the lack of highways mentioned, and the definition of number in the sense of highway designation. For instance, if I see a highway designated 2A, I can no longer assume that the highway number is decimal, but does that mean hexadecimal? does that mean I must interpret all highway numbers as hexidecimal, and determine their prime-ness from there? The other problem is the 'named after a president' - Assuming this is restricted to the USA, does this apply only to popular designations, or any name, however long forgotten about? because, looking at the map of Lexington, you will see that there are NO highways named after presidents. Oh, the worries. [[Special:Contributions/76.119.234.207|76.119.234.207]] 18:34, 4 January 2013 (UTC)
 
I would have thought that Randall meant the town of Lexington, Massachusetts, since he is lives in this area, and there's a Munroe Cemetery. The problem is the lack of highways mentioned, and the definition of number in the sense of highway designation. For instance, if I see a highway designated 2A, I can no longer assume that the highway number is decimal, but does that mean hexadecimal? does that mean I must interpret all highway numbers as hexidecimal, and determine their prime-ness from there? The other problem is the 'named after a president' - Assuming this is restricted to the USA, does this apply only to popular designations, or any name, however long forgotten about? because, looking at the map of Lexington, you will see that there are NO highways named after presidents. Oh, the worries. [[Special:Contributions/76.119.234.207|76.119.234.207]] 18:34, 4 January 2013 (UTC)

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