they look faulty, but its fun to mess with them. But do they really work or is it just random?
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Posted by admin
on Monday, November 16th, 2009 at 2:55 am.
3 Responses to “Do those love calculator things on the internet work?”
In my opinion, they are just programs made by firms or by an individual to attract people who are in love and are not sure whether their love will last forever.
Try not to play with, because I had a problem with a firm called Lebensuhr.com, that was a calculator that measures the exact time of your presence. Instead of displaying figures, it sent an e-mail saying I have to pay lots of money.
Then I figured out that such a firm does not exist, but the e-mail looked like a genuine one. It used a firm name that does not belong it.
So, be careful.
Left by Verlan on
November 17th, 2009
That depends what you mean by ‘work’. I can at least tell you that, if the calculator is taking nothing more than your name, the results it gives will probably not be noticeably better than what it could achieve by completely random guesswork. If it asks for a number of other more pertinent parameters, then its accuracy might be slightly higher, IF it is coded properly. However, for the most part I suspect that such ‘love calculators’ spit out nothing more than randomly generated garbage, in which case there’s no useful information to be had from them.
In my opinion, they are just programs made by firms or by an individual to attract people who are in love and are not sure whether their love will last forever.
Try not to play with, because I had a problem with a firm called Lebensuhr.com, that was a calculator that measures the exact time of your presence. Instead of displaying figures, it sent an e-mail saying I have to pay lots of money.
Then I figured out that such a firm does not exist, but the e-mail looked like a genuine one. It used a firm name that does not belong it.
So, be careful.
Left by Verlan on November 17th, 2009
That depends what you mean by ‘work’. I can at least tell you that, if the calculator is taking nothing more than your name, the results it gives will probably not be noticeably better than what it could achieve by completely random guesswork. If it asks for a number of other more pertinent parameters, then its accuracy might be slightly higher, IF it is coded properly. However, for the most part I suspect that such ‘love calculators’ spit out nothing more than randomly generated garbage, in which case there’s no useful information to be had from them.
Left by green_meklar on November 20th, 2009
Its All Bullshit.
Left by n19spartan on November 22nd, 2009