101100

Today I am 101100.

That’s XLIV in Roman.

44 is also the square root of 1936. 1936 was a leap year starting on a Wednesday.

The Year 44 was also a leap year starting on a Wednesday.

It was also known as the Year of the Consulship of Crispus and Taurus. Which is another coincidence because I like crisps and I’m also a Taurus.

And while we’re on Wikipedia, we can use the API to find out that page id 101100 is Sydney Harbour National Park which opened when I was 3.

Wolfram Alpha reminds me that 44 is the ASCII code for a comma.

Whichever way you look at it #101100 is a disappointing colour.

But if we use the random art generator then we can make a more colourful image from the number. But actually the image with that identifier is more interesting. Glitchy!

The binary number is also a car multimedia entertainment system. But £200 feels a bit steep, even if it is my birthday.

A 12 year old boy once bid £101,100 for a flooded Seat Toledo on EBay. Because reasons.

101100, or tubulin tyrosine ligase-like family, member 3 to its friends, also seems to do important things for mice.

I didn’t really enjoy Jamendo album 101100, the Jamez Anthony story.

Care of Cell Block 101100 was a bit better in my opinion. But only a bit.

Discogs release 101100 is The Sun’s Running Out by Perfume Tree. Of which the most notable thing is that track six includes a sample from a Dr Who episode.

I’m not really sure what the tag 101100 on flickr means.

IMDB entry 101100 is “Flesh ‘n’ Blood

The Board Game Geek identifier 101100 is for an XBox 360 version of 1 vs 100. That’s not even a board game!

Whereas Drive Thru RPG catalogue product 101100 as Battlemage. Which sounds much more interesting.

If I search for “101100 coordinates” on google, then it tells me that it’s somewhere in China. I should probably know why.

There are 26 results for 101100 on data.gov.uk. But none on data.gov. Which explains why the UK is #1 in the world for open data.

But HD 101100 is also a star.

And a minor planet discovered on 14th September 1998

CAS 101-10-0 is 2-(3-Chlorophenoxy)propionic acid. I think its a herbicide. Anyway, this is what it looks like.

It’s also a marine worm.

And an insect.

In the database of useful biological numbers, we discover that entry 101100 is the maximal emission wavelength for Venus fluorophore. Which is, of course, 528 nm.

I think the main thing I’ve learnt in my 44 years is that the web is an amazing place.