MathBabbler drives the east-side Loop 101 on almost a daily basis.
101 is a positive, natural, whole number integer 101 is odd 101 is prime 101 is a palindromic number 101 is the sum of five consecutive primes: 13 + 17 + 19 + 23 + 29 101 in binary is 1100101 101 in octal is 0145 101 in hexadecimal is 0x65 1012 is 5 1013 is 10 1014 is 17 1015 is 26 1016 is 37 1017 is 50 1018 is 65 1019 is 82 10110 is 101 10111 is 122 10112 145 10113 170 10114 197 10115 226 10116 is 257 101101 is 10202 ____ the reciprocal of 101 is .0099 101! = 9.42594776 * 10159 101 is 102 plus 1 101101 is = 2.73186197 * 10202 101 is a factor of 404 (HTTP status code for page not found)MathBabbler turned 50 during 2007; therefore, during this year of his life he could have said he was 101 base-7 years of age.
Wikipedia.org:: 101 (number)
Update::2008.03.22
On Pi Day 2008 (i.e. March 14th), MathBabbler visited Roper Lake State Park located at 101 E. Roper Lake Road near Safford, Arizona. While wandering the park, MathBabbler found a 101 base-2 MPH speed limit sign to add to his collection of prime numbered speed limit signs.
Creator: Gerald Thurman
[gthurman@gmail.com]
Created: 30 April 2007