enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pennsylvania Lottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Lottery

    The Pennsylvania Lottery is a lottery operated by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.It was created by the Pennsylvania General Assembly on August 26, 1971; [1] two months later, Henry Kaplan was appointed as its first executive director.

  3. Lean-to - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lean-to

    A lean-to is originally defined as a structure in which the rafters lean against another building or wall, also referred to in prior times as a penthouse. [2] These structures characteristically have shed roofs , also referred to as "skillions", or "outshots" and "catslides" when the shed's roof is a direct extension of a larger structure's.

  4. Quick Pick vs Picking Your Own Lotto Numbers: Is One ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/quick-pick-vs-picking-own-115700389.html

    Here's the difference between choosing your own lotto numbers versus using a random number generator.

  5. Ohio Lottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohio_Lottery

    The Ohio Lottery is a state lottery run by the Ohio Lottery Commission. Its games consist of scratch tickets; Pick 3, Pick 4, Pick 5 ("numbers games"); Rolling Cash 5, Classic Lotto, Keno, Lucky for Life , Mega Millions , and Powerball .

  6. How hard is it to win the lottery? Odds to keep in mind as ...

    www.aol.com/news/hard-win-lottery-odds-keep...

    Even if you bought a lottery ticket for every drawing over 80 years — two times a week for Mega Millions and three times a week for Powerball — you would still be far less likely to win than ...

  7. New Jersey Lottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Jersey_Lottery

    Pick-3 is a three-digit draw game drawn twice daily. [6] It began on May 22, 1975, as a daily game and the nation’s first game where players can choose their own numbers and play type. Midday drawings were introduced in November 2001. It was originally known as Pick-it; the name changed to Pick-3 in 1987 to distinguish from the newer Pick-4 game.

  8. The Lottery Hackers - The Huffington Post

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/lotto...

    Gerald Selbee broke the code of the American breakfast cereal industry because he was bored at work one day, because it was a fun mental challenge, because most things at his job were not fun and because he could—because he happened to be the kind of person who saw puzzles all around him, puzzles that other people don’t realize are puzzles: the little ciphers and patterns that float ...

  9. Autocode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autocode

    The language was nearly machine-independent and had floating-point arithmetic, unlike the first one. On the other hand it allowed only one operation per line, offered few mnemonic names and had no way to define user subroutines. [5] An example code which loads array of size 11 of floating-point numbers from the input would look like this