Mar 23, 2010
Hi Olle, I joined your pi club back in 2000 (702 digits) and remembered your website. So here is sth new: I ran a half marathon and took a photo of the finish time digits. I came through in 1:37 hours so I had enough time for the 1:41:59 photo, but the person who took the photo wasn´t quick enough. Here is the second best photo that is possible.


If I ever run a marathon, you will get the photo of the finish time 3:14:15.

And most important, it was on March 14.
Christian Rimpau


Feb 22, 2007
Hi Pi Lovers

We at www.Pination.com have set up a new Wiki "Pi - The Wild Side"
We invite you all to participate and contribute your piece of Pi - The Wild Side

Pi has remained within the domain of mathematicians and engineers or has at least it has been mainly confined to the technical side - what can Pi do for us. Now it is time to unleash these shackles and see what we can do for Pi, through colour, sound, shape, space and movement. It time to demonstrate the wild side of Pi. This wiki is dedictated to the artistic and creative nature of Pi through artisits, musicians, writers and animators.
Pi is more than a just number. We invite you all to participate and contribute.

Best wishes
Hugh & Priscilla
Founders Pination


Mar 1, 2002
James Gilson sent me a link to his site about a connection between the fine structure constant and pi.
Jan 27, 2000
Christian Rimpau told me he has made a list of site swaps (juggling term) in the first 3 million digits of ...
June 1 1998
Petter Lindborg had an interesting approximation of pi:

(314+142)/(2*3*5*7)*1373/(13*73)=3.1415926539...
Note also that 314 are the first three digits of pi, 142 are the first decimals (rounded), 2, 3, 5, 7 are the first four primes, 1373 can be split into 13 and 73, and 13, 73 and 1373 are all primes!! Is amazing or what???!!!


May 8 1998
Olle --
Hmm, your web interface wouldn't let me send a message through it; it complained about being abused and getting restrictions put on it. Anyway, here's a little something I thought you might find amusing. At the McDonalds restaurant here on campus, a Big Mac extra value meal costs $2.99. When you add the tax, the total comes to $3.14 -- it costs . :)

James Marshall