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  2. I Ching divination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Ching_divination

    The two-coin method involves tossing one pair of coins twice: on the first toss, two heads give a value of 2, and anything else is 3; on the second toss, each coin is valued separately, to give a sum from 6 to 9, as above. This results in the same distribution of probabilities as for the yarrow-stalk method.

  3. Why do we toss coins into fountains? - AOL

    www.aol.com/why-toss-coins-fountains-160126436.html

    Where the money goes. Some well-known fountains can collect thousands of dollars in coins each year. According to an NBC report from 2016, the Trevi Fountain accumulated about $1.5 million in ...

  4. Coin flipping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coin_flipping

    (The revived XFL, which launched in 2020, removed the coin toss altogether and allowed that decision to be made as part of a team's home field advantage.) In an association football match, the team winning the coin toss chooses which goal to attack in the first half; the opposing team kicks off for the first half. For the second half, the teams ...

  5. Checking whether a coin is fair - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checking_whether_a_coin_is...

    = at 99.90% level of confidence (Z=3.3) 3. The coin is tossed 12000 times with a result of 5961 heads (and 6039 tails). What interval does the value of (the true probability of obtaining heads) lie within if a confidence level of 99.999% is desired?

  6. Three Coins in the Fountain (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Coins_in_the...

    A nice way to take the movie audience on a sightseeing tour of Rome, with a flying side trip to Venice, through the courtesy of CinemaScope, has been devised in Three Coins in the Fountain, a handsomely colored romance that 20th Century-Fox delivered to the Roxy yesterday. The trick is to underpin the picture with flimsy and harmless accounts ...

  7. Fair coin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_coin

    A fair coin, when tossed, should have an equal chance of landing either side up. In probability theory and statistics, a sequence of independent Bernoulli trials with probability 1/2 of success on each trial is metaphorically called a fair coin. One for which the probability is not 1/2 is called a biased or unfair coin.

  8. Fun Mardi Gras Facts That You Didn't Know - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/fun-mardi-gras-facts-didnt...

    Specialty coins, or doubloons, ... The seemingly never-ending trove of beads tossed during the countless parades are often taken home as souvenirs. Many, though, find a different post-parade life ...

  9. St. Petersburg paradox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Petersburg_paradox

    A casino offers a game of chance for a single player in which a fair coin is tossed at each stage. The initial stake begins at 2 dollars and is doubled every time tails appears. The first time heads appears, the game ends and the player wins whatever is the current stake.