Monday 6 February 2012

HOW TO WIN THE LOTTO

Here's an amazing, FREE lotto system - for playing and
winning lottery, lotto, or keno.

It's based on a remarkable mathematical fact about lotto
numbers and keno numbers. After you read it, you'll never look at the lottery
the old way again !

Let me ask you a question. Which bet would you rather take:
-guessing six lotto numbers between 1 and 50 ?or -guessing six
lotto numbers between 1 and 15 ?

Incredible as it seems, most WINNING LOTTO
NUMBERS can be mathematically represented as numbers between 1 and 15 !
This will take some explaining...

HOW IT WORKS:
It's actually very simple. The idea occurred to me when I thought about
how a computer software program would store a winning lotto, keno or lottery
number on disk. Storage space is always an issue with computers, so data
compression is used whenever possible. To compress a lotto number, the software
might store the "delta" of each number instead of the lotto number
itself.

What's a delta? The delta is the difference
between a number and the previous number.

For example, look at this winning lotto number:
3-9-18-19-27-33

Now here is the same number, represented as deltas:
3-6-9-1-8-6

All the numbers are smaller, yet it still represents, and can be converted
back into the same winning lotto number!

I created this number by subtracting each of the lotto numbers from the
number right before it. The first number is still three because there is no
number previous to three. For the second number, 9-3=6, third number, 18-9=9,
fourth number, 19-18=1, fifth number, 27-19=8 , and sixth number,
33-27=6.

To turn the delta numbers back into the original winning lotto number or
keno number, we do a series of simple additions, always adding the result of the
addition just done to the next number in the series: The first number is 3,
second number, 3+6=9, third number, 9+9=18, fourth number, 18+1=19, fifth
number,19+8=27, sixth number, 27+6=33.

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN?
It means that you can pick lotto numbers and keno numbers by guessing
numbers between 1 and 15 instead of 1 and 50! Numbers higher than 15 will occur,
but 90% of the time they don't! Please bear in mind that all the examples on
this page assume a six-digit game, with numbers from 1 - 50.

The values in these
examples will vary, based on your game (the Analysis
Lotto
software can adjust these values automatically.)

WHAT'S HAPPENING? WHY DOES THIS
WORK?
It works because the smaller numbers represent the typical distribution of winning keno and lotto numbers.

In
other words, in a six digit game like this, the numbers are usually spaced 1-15
digits from each other. Since this spacing stays somewhat consistent from
winning number to winning number, our scheme to represent them as smaller delta
numbers works.

By guessing deltas that follow our rules instead of guessing the keno or
lotto numbers themselves, your guess will have the same number distribution
characteristics as other winning numbers. Does this give you an advantage? Well,
read on.

WAIT! THERE'S MORE! IT GETS
BETTER!

I studied the distribution of delta numbers in a year's worth of winning
numbers from the New York, California and Michigan lotteries. When I did this, I
discovered something exciting but at first, truly
puzzling. They are not randomly distributed, but
instead have a clear bias toward smaller numbers!
Hard to believe? Check out some of the raw data yourself by clicking HERE.
This chart shows the distribution of delta numbers in several months'
worth of Michigan lotto drawings:
01
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 02 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
03 ++++++++++++++++++++ 04 +++++++++++++++++++++++ 05
+++++++++++++++++++++++ 06 +++++++++++++++++ 07 ++++++++++++++++++++
08 ++++++++++ 09 +++++++++++ 10 ++++++++++ 11 +++++ 12
+++++++++++ 13 ++++++ 14 ++++++++ 15 ++++ 16 ++++++ 17 ++++
18 + 19 ++ 20 +++++ 21 ++ 222324
+
It turns out that nearly 60% of the time, a delta calculated from a
winning number will be SIX or less! 30% of the time,
the delta will be THREE or less!

In fact, ONE is the single most popular number,
occurring almost 15% of the time. That translates to more than half the time in any given six-number pick.

The predominance of the number ONE means that adjacent
number pairing in winning lotto numbers must be quite common (and it is quite
common, just look at any series of winning lotto numbers.)

Therefore, most of the Delta numbers you will be guessing can be picked
from an even smaller set of numbers!

Why the low number bias exists in our calculated delta numbers is a
challenge to explain. I expected to find a nice even distribution, perhaps
clustered around 7 or 8, since that would be the average spacing when 50 is
divided by six numbers.

Instead, I see numbers below 8 coming up much more often. Why?
Well, there are valid statistical reasons this happens. When you consider
that the sum of all the Deltas have to add up to the highest lotto digit, it's
apparent that there isn't room for many large numbers.

But the patterns I'm seeing still often seem out-of-the-ordinary. One possibility is that the balls
in many lotto picking machines at times do not thoroughly
mix. The excess of small delta numbers, and especially the predominance
of ONE, mean that balls that went in the lotto
machine next to each other are coming up together!
It's not obvious in the lotto numbers themselves, but the delta calculation
reveals the pattern.

To visualize this, imagine a lotto number machine where the balls all
enter lined up in numerical order (like they do here in Michigan.) Now imagine
that the numbers are picked without mixing the balls.
What would happen? Well the picks would still be somewhat random, of course. But
the balls nearest the exit ports of the machine would be the ones most likely to
be picked. And All the balls near the exit port are consecutive numbers, since
that's how they went into the machine. You might not know what numbers they are.
But if you track Deltas, those number pairs would show up as ones. Now, this is an extreme example. But if
the balls don't mix enough, you can see how some of these tendencies could
remain.
Lending support to this theory are apparent trends (look at the raw data) in the frequency of number ONE in the deltas. The beginning of the chart shows lots of
ones. Later on, they taper off, then start appearing more often again. This sort
of behavior might occur with changes in the operation of the lotto machine.
Perhaps some weeks the balls are allowed to mix longer than at other times,
owing to TV schedules or other factors. An astute observer might pay attention
to these trends and play lots of adjacent pairs when there are many delta ONEs coming up.
A computer program would be ideal for tracking such delta pattern trends.
So I made one! Check it out HERE. You can take a
tour of its features HERE.
Need some "hands-on" proof that this works? Click HERE. Or see our new lottery
video, HERE.

RULES FOR GUESSING:
Okay, here's how you guess numbers for a six-digit, 1 to 50 lotto game. If
your game is similar to this, it'll work fine. The program Analysis Lotto can adjust these rules to match your
particular lotto or keno game.
Remember that, unlike guessing a lotto number, your delta series can
contain the same number more than once, and the delta numbers are not necessarily ordered in ascending (lowest to highest)
fashion. Your guess can contain one number higher than 15, but it's better to
stick with the numbers 1-15. Why? Nine out of ten delta numbers will be 15 or
less. This means that at least half the time, there will be no delta number
greater than 15 in a given six-number-pick. As there are more possible numbers
greater than 15 than there are numbers less than 15, its just better strategy to
focus your guesses on those cases where the odds are in your favor.
For the best odds, keep at least half of your numbers very low, maybe 8 or
less. Remember the delta number ONE occurs somewhere
at least once in most (but not all) winning numbers.
Also, the sum of the numbers in your guess must not exceed the highest
number allowed in the lotto game you are playing (for most lotto games,
somewhere close to 50).
In fact, the odds are highest that the sum of all the deltas
in a winning number will be within 15 of the highest number
allowed.
After you guess, randomly mix up your delta numbers ,and turn them into a
lotto number by following the addition sequence.
When the winning number is announced, even if you don't win, turn it into
a delta number and compare it to the delta of the number you picked to see how
close you really were!

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