Yes, you need an ignitorpeter said:sometimes what is cold can become hot.
The challenge remains, in finding those little gems.Beaker said:Yes, you need an ignitor![]()
Often you have them in mind....peter said:The challenge remains, in finding those little gems.
I don't play all most due numbersshirazbai said:<snip>
right when everyone else is expecting the most due/probable numbers to be drawn (which is pretty much every draw the way we look at them now).
I want to eventually have two sets every draw. One small "most due/probable" set and one small "least due/probable" set. Attack it (the lottery) from both ends, so to say.

pairs/triples 
peter said:Last 10 mil draw was draw 2100, I'm thinking the 2 to repeat from that draw.
~~~ Beaker said:I don't play all most due numbers
I look at least due/probable.pairs/triples
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~~~ Tomi,Tomi said:Thanks Sheba for moving my posting to the right spot.
Questions:
1. What is DN stands for?
2. What is LD-5?
3. What is LD-zero?
4. What is Beaker's Law?
5. To All Members especially Senior:
* Did you ever win a jackpot or 5 Nos?
* What advice you can give to a new participant so we will have a productive discussion?
~~~ shirazbai said:If probability states that over an "x" number of draws that the "occurence" of each number will closely approach if not equal the occurence of every other number in our lottery (1 to 49), then it only stands to reason that these "least due" numbers may have some catching up to do at some point.
This has nothing to do with odds - of course odds don't change - that is a no brainer.powerball said:That is the gambler's fallacy. Read The Skeptic's Dictionary:
The gambler's fallacy is the mistaken notion that the odds for something with a fixed probability increase or decrease depending upon recent occurrences.
LT should add this definition to the glossary. The odds are always the same, no matter what numbers have been selected in the past.
peter said:No, I'm not Beaker, teens and twenties to miss, see my picks.
OK