The Beauty of Binary Palindromes

 I'm about to geek out about numbers. You've been warned.

A few weeks ago, I was reviewing some data and stumbled across the number 10110001101. 

It's a palindrome. It's magic to me. In a sea of random numerical chaos, here's this perfect little symmetry.

Why This Matters (Or Doesn't)

As engineers, we spend our days wrestling with complexity. Debugging race conditions. Untangling spaghetti code. Convincing systems to behave predictably. Finding patterns, even meaningless ones, reminds me why I love this work.

Mathematics is full of these moments. The Fibonacci sequence appearing in nature. Perfect numbers. The golden ratio. Binary palindromes.

The Engineer's Brain

My partner jokes that I can't just experience things—I have to analyze them. See a race bib number? Convert it to binary. Look at a sunset? Calculate the angle of the sun. Watch a movie? Critique the unrealistic tech scenes.

Guilty as charged.

But this is what makes us good at what we do. We see patterns. We question assumptions. We find the elegant solution hiding in plain sight.

So here's to 10110001101. And because it's important to me, in binary and in decimal. To all the beautiful, useless patterns that make the mathematical universe a little more delightful and a very important day in my running career even more special

There are 10 kinds of people in the world: those who appreciate binary palindromes, and those who don't.

I know which one I am.

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