HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015930.jpg

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Extraction Summary

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Document Information

Type: Book excerpt / investigative file page
File Size: 866 KB
Summary

This document appears to be page 240 from a book or report, titled 'Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?'. The content is educational or illustrative, featuring a graphic of a long multiplication math problem (435 x 311) and text discussing the process of multiplication, Diophantine problems, and the Pythagorean theorem. The page bears the Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015930', indicating it was included in a document production for the House Oversight Committee, likely as an attachment or evidence in a larger investigation.

Key Quotes (2)

"The square on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides."
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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015930.jpg
Quote #1
"Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?"
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HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015930.jpg
Quote #2

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (1,089 characters)

240
Are the Androids Dreaming Yet?
435 x 311
435
x 311
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435
435
1305
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135285
Long Multiplication
back to your childhood. Do you recall being taught long multiplication at school? Take a look at the next illustration and it will all come flooding back. Once you learn the process of long multiplication you can follow the rules and get the right answer for any similar problem every time. To do this, you lay out the calculation in a particular format and apply the logic. Multiply each number by a single digit of the other number and then add the results together.
Diophantine problems are a little more complex than long multiplication and some of them are a bit abstruse. But there is one very famous Diophantine problem we can all recite. "The square on the hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides." The equation for a Pythagorean triangle.
The theorem applies to right-angled triangles and there are sixteen whole number solutions, known as Pythagorean triples; three, four, five; is one example.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015930

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