Hi Rod!
I'm glad you decided to post anyway -- don't forget the power of 3:33 !!!

I saw it a few times yesterday myself.

Right and wrong clocks both, respectively.
I enjoyed your discussion. It rang a bell with me, your concluding (conjecturing, if that's a verb!) that the conjectured limit might be as many as thousands of digits -- it is not an infinite number.
I was discussing the other day with a friend, the idea of an 'infinite universe,' or even the supposed 'infinite density' of the singularity at the center of a black hole. We concluded (from our non-physics, non-mathematical framework

) that such calculations could not be right. When you suppose that the universe exploded outward from the Big Bang (assuming it indeed did so), you also suppose that matter flung outward from that central point in all directions -- and has continued to move outward since that point in time. If this is correct, the universe could not possibly be infinite -- instead it is only as large as its point of extension since that time.
However, we came up against a question which has bothered me since early childhood -- whatever the outer limits of all that matter might be -- what exists just on the other side of its edges?? Still more open space, right? Because even if there were 'walls' to the edges of the universe, which there certainly couldn't be -- any wall has another side to it, by definition. So what's on the other side of that wall? Then I start wondering perhaps the universe indeed must be infinite, for limitless space seems the only possibility. Yet I can't conceive of that. Even if we conceive of the universe as spherical, when you envision any sphere, there is the other side to the edges of the sphere, in 360 degrees rotation. So it's a conundrum.
And when you think of the infinite density of the singularity, how indeed could it be infinitely dense? It seemed to us that it would have a finite point of density, however staggering the density might be.
I don't know whether or not these musings in any way relate to your quest -- but I keep sensing spheres and circles in all this, so wondered if it relates back to your conception of Pi to any extent? Do we find Pi in the singularity? In the radius or circumference of the matter that spilled out of the Big Bang???
But something appeals to me about your idea that Pi does not have infinite digits, but instead thousands . . . I have a dream that you will one day prove something about Pi that to this point has merely stumped the world.
As for the Finnish night sky -- I saw your Pi quest there as well. Did you? With your ties to Finland, I wondered if the sky was calling to you!

Perhaps it was 'known' that I would find these images and then share them with you . . . these images even host a nucleus of sorts! A central point? Perhaps triangles abound?

Even though these images are 2-D, there is something about this 'circular' object in the night sky -- to me it appeared to be more spherical than circular. I wonder if all 2-D abstractions of the circle are indeed 3-D (or beyond) in another dimensional framework? Perhaps it's hard to draw conclusions about Pi when we limit its discussion to a 2-D model? OK enough gibberish from me.
Thanks for sharing!!! With love to you, Michele
