Details for this torrent 

Pi to 1 Billion Digits Precision [TXT]
Type:
Other > Other
Files:
1
Size:
416.84 MiB (437086416 Bytes)
Tag(s):
text billion digits precision
Uploaded:
2009-02-22 06:54:00 GMT
By:
weasel5i2
Seeders:
0
Leechers:
1
Comments
10  

Info Hash:
AB23DA4BD09CC6A9615B0A2A2A508589C20C89AD




(Problems with magnets links are fixed by upgrading your torrent client!)
Pi (Ï€) calculated out to 1 billion (1,000,000,000) digits past the decimal point.

For all those math weirdos out there.

The file is in ASCII text format, and compressed with 7zip. 

The uncompressed size of the file is 953 MB (1,000,000,002B)


                                        ^^
This file has a 43% compression ratio! w00t!
                                        <>

EDIT: It is also on MegaUpload: http :// www. mega upload .com / ? d = 0M2PFDV6

(Stupid URL filter, grrr.)

File list not available.

Comments

Try Universal Viewer, it's really fast and there's a free version:

http://www.uvviewsoft.com

worked for me! I put this huge file on a 2GB USB drive, along with the viewer (and a .BAT file to launch it using Autorun) and it's pretty quick, even loading over USB!
..or, if you prefer the Pro version:

http://piratebayproxy.live/torrent/4142120

^_^
Whoa, I just found a Japanese site with even MORE downloadable Pi!! Up to 100 billion digits:

http://ja0hxv.calico.jp/pai/estart.html
"BTW, I think you have it wrong. Shouldn't that be a 57% compression ratio? 10% would mean a tenth gone, 50% would mean half gone, and this is beyond that. "

Most programs give the compression ratio as the compressed size over the original size, in which case 43% is correct. It's a matter of convention, really.
i've been trying and trying to think of a reason to download this... any ideas? :D
i opened with universal viewer pasted into microsoft word saved as tich text format onlt 16 MB
never mind i rechecked my pc only pasted 16,777,000 numbers out of 1000000000000
You sir, just Won The Game.
The above link http://ja0hxv.calico.jp/pai/estart.html no longer exists :( but this one does, 5 trillion digits of pi, 1.53 TB!