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How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do
you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 etc Theo |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
"Theo" wrote in message
... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 13:50 14 May 2021, NY said:
"Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). I notice on the continent people often quote the digits of a phone number in pairs, whereas the UK tends to quote a number in groups of three digits. I originally put it down to how their phone company laid out the digits but I think it's more widespread than that. Personally, I kind of visualise and alomst recognise the SIGHT of digit-pairs but I remember digit-triplets mainly by their SOUND. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On Fri, 14 May 2021 13:16:06 +0100, Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. I don't tend to memorise. Read it off the phone in bits, then read it back to check against the phone. Not like having it read out to you to memorise. I find that I memorise phone numbers long term as 5 digits then 6 digits. Cheers Dave R -- AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64 -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14/05/2021 13:16, Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. worse when they sent an internet link to click on to my non android nokia 1100 |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14/05/2021 14:03, Pamela wrote:
On 13:50 14 May 2021, NY said: "Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). I notice on the continent people often quote the digits of a phone number in pairs, whereas the UK tends to quote a number in groups of three digits. germans quote number pairs backwards, "five and twenty (blackbirds)" while we would say twenty-five. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14/05/2021 13:16, Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. Bank card Pin numbers are 4 digits because that is all that most people can manage to remember. just write it down somewhere that only you can access, or split it into 3 groups of 2 digits and try and convert them into the ascii equivalent which, it you are lucky, might give you a 3-character code which is easier to remember. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
"Andrew" wrote in message
... On 13:50 14 May 2021, NY said: German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. germans quote number pairs backwards, "five and twenty (blackbirds)" while we would say twenty-five. That's what I was referring to above. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14/05/2021 14:03, Pamela wrote:
On 13:50 14 May 2021, NY said: "Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). I notice on the continent people often quote the digits of a phone number in pairs, whereas the UK tends to quote a number in groups of three digits. I originally put it down to how their phone company laid out the digits but I think it's more widespread than that. Personally, I kind of visualise and alomst recognise the SIGHT of digit-pairs but I remember digit-triplets mainly by their SOUND. As already said, it may be structurally easier to work in digit pairs or triplets - or a mixture. Surely the only rule is that it is discourteous to confirm back a number NOT in the format first spoken. E.g. 23 93 73 confirmed back as 239 373 ! PA |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
"Peter Able" wrote in message
... I notice on the continent people often quote the digits of a phone number in pairs, whereas the UK tends to quote a number in groups of three digits. I originally put it down to how their phone company laid out the digits but I think it's more widespread than that. Personally, I kind of visualise and alomst recognise the SIGHT of digit-pairs but I remember digit-triplets mainly by their SOUND. That sounds a bit synaethesic. I'm not sure I've ever been aware that I've remembered a phone number by what the groups of digits sound like. I imagine the sight of the digits on the page. But everyone has their own method of remembering things, and no method is better or worse than another, as long as it works and is quick to encode/decode. I understand that a way of remembering a sequence of objects so you can replay them in the right order is to devise a "story" in which all the objects appear. But when I've tried it, it takes me so long to encode them into the story and then to decode them later on, that it doesn't work for me. As already said, it may be structurally easier to work in digit pairs or triplets - or a mixture. Surely the only rule is that it is discourteous to confirm back a number NOT in the format first spoken. E.g. 23 93 73 confirmed back as 239 373 ! I'm rather malicious. If someone quotes a phone number to me in groups of two, especially if those groups are given tens-and-units significance ("twenty-three forty-five" as opposed to "two three [pause] four five" I tend to read it back as digits in groups of three, because that's what I was *expecting* to hear. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
Peter Able wrote:
On 14/05/2021 14:03, Pamela wrote: On 13:50 14 May 2021, NY said: "Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). I notice on the continent people often quote the digits of a phone number in pairs, whereas the UK tends to quote a number in groups of three digits. I originally put it down to how their phone company laid out the digits but I think it's more widespread than that. Personally, I kind of visualise and alomst recognise the SIGHT of digit-pairs but I remember digit-triplets mainly by their SOUND. As already said, it may be structurally easier to work in digit pairs or triplets - or a mixture. Surely the only rule is that it is discourteous to confirm back a number NOT in the format first spoken. E.g. 23 93 73 confirmed back as 239 373 ! I actually do that intentionally both for myself and with others. It's a good check that a digit hasn't been misplaced or accidentally inverted e.g. forty two (40 2) vs forty-two (42). |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
Pamela wrote:
On 13:50 14 May 2021, NY said: "Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). I notice on the continent people often quote the digits of a phone number in pairs, whereas the UK tends to quote a number in groups of three digits. I think it's because they read the two digits as single numbers: 15 56 45 is fifteen fifty-six forty-five. Whereas we read them as single digits regardless of how we mentally group them: one five five six four five. I originally put it down to how their phone company laid out the digits but I think it's more widespread than that. Personally, I kind of visualise and alomst recognise the SIGHT of digit-pairs but I remember digit-triplets mainly by their SOUND. Do you remember them as three digit numbers (one hundred and twenty-three) or triple digits (one two three)? |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
NY wrote:
French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). The pause is almost imperceptible, but it is there. It helps in france that all phone numbers are 10 digits long so any mistranscription is obvious. Whereas in the UK it's not always obvious if you've dropped or gained a digit. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14/05/2021 13:16, Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. Usually, groups of three and four. Phone numbers I do differently, depending on what country they're for. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. This is all that's left of PI. 314 159 26535 89793 23846 264 3383 279 502 69399 37510 ^ ^ +--- missing here ? +--- keeps flipping That's to demonstrate just how variable chunking can be, in a memory task. Paul |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
In uk.d-i-y Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. I have a virtual mobile number for these, so they arrive in my E-Mail and can be cut+paste to their destination. No memory required! :-) -- Chris Green · |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14/05/2021 13:16, Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? Depends what goldfish tendencies ye have. You only have to "remember" it for a second, and if that's difficult you can bring up the SMS thingy on ya phone. On an iPhone, the recently received number from SMS is a shortcut on the keyboard. -- Adrian C |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14:58 14 May 2021, Peter Able said:
Surely the only rule is that it is discourteous to confirm back a number NOT in the format first spoken. E.g. 23 93 73 confirmed back as 239 373 ! It may seem so but digit grouping that's easier to recall (which is what some people like to emphasise) is not the same as conventional digit grouping when you want to confirm you've understood a number. For example, Three Mobile customer service is: 0 33333 8 1001 That may be handy to remember after you have heard it enough times but for a simple one-off confirmation it's messy because it breaks the usual rhythm when speaking such numbers. Nor can you easily confirm it fits the usual landline format of 5+6 digits. I prefer: 03333 381 001. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 15:47 14 May 2021, Chris said:
Pamela wrote: On 13:50 14 May 2021, NY said: "Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). I notice on the continent people often quote the digits of a phone number in pairs, whereas the UK tends to quote a number in groups of three digits. I think it's because they read the two digits as single numbers: 15 56 45 is fifteen fifty-six forty-five. Whereas we read them as single digits regardless of how we mentally group them: one five five six four five. I originally put it down to how their phone company laid out the digits but I think it's more widespread than that. Personally, I kind of visualise and alomst recognise the SIGHT of digit-pairs but I remember digit-triplets mainly by their SOUND. Do you remember them as three digit numbers (one hundred and twenty-three) or triple digits (one two three)? I don't register them as two specific three digit numbers. I hear the digits when spoken and then recall the sound of their names all run together ("sixfivethree") without registering the group as a specific number. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 15:53 14 May 2021, Chris said:
NY wrote: French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). The pause is almost imperceptible, but it is there. It helps in france that all phone numbers are 10 digits long so any mistranscription is obvious. Whereas in the UK it's not always obvious if you've dropped or gained a digit. If I confirm any 10 digit number (phone number or otherwise) I would divide it into groups of 2 or 4 digits. I would never use a combination that switched between a group with an even number of digits and a group of 3 digits. For example: 4+4+2 or 4+2+4 etc is okay. But 3+3+4 is not. On the other hand, a 9 digit number gets special treatment (from me!) and is preferably spken as 3 groups of 3 digits. I've heard people use the weirdest groupings for 8 digit bank account number, when there's nothing simpler than 4+4 digits. Add a bit of rising intonation at the end of each 4 digit group and it's a doddle to convey. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On Friday, 14 May 2021 at 18:13:10 UTC+1, Pamela wrote:
On 15:53 14 May 2021, Chris said: NY wrote: French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). The pause is almost imperceptible, but it is there. It helps in france that all phone numbers are 10 digits long so any mistranscription is obvious. Whereas in the UK it's not always obvious if you've dropped or gained a digit. If I confirm any 10 digit number (phone number or otherwise) I would divide it into groups of 2 or 4 digits. I would never use a combination that switched between a group with an even number of digits and a group of 3 digits. For example: 4+4+2 or 4+2+4 etc is okay. But 3+3+4 is not. On the other hand, a 9 digit number gets special treatment (from me!) and is preferably spken as 3 groups of 3 digits. I've heard people use the weirdest groupings for 8 digit bank account number, when there's nothing simpler than 4+4 digits. Add a bit of rising intonation at the end of each 4 digit group and it's a doddle to convey. As UK mobile numbers all start 07, I tend to say my own number as 07 999 999 999. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
Pamela wrote
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? I don’t say anything to myself, just enter the 6 digit number. Do it in 3s when telling a call center an order number etc. Phone numbers are quite confusing given that I say the number with a 4 digit first group and then two 3 digit groups and some of the buggers read it back as 2 5 digit groups and I have to think about whether it is correct. The landline number is a 2 digit std code, then two 4 digit groups. It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. |
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How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
In message , NY writes
"Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). To add to the confusion, two of the letters in your French '20' are also consistently reversed! -- Ian |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
"Chris" wrote in message
... NY wrote: French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). The pause is almost imperceptible, but it is there. It helps in france that all phone numbers are 10 digits long so any mistranscription is obvious. Though it doesn't help if you are keying the digits as you (think you) hear them, rather than writing it down, validating the number of digits and any non-permitted combinations, and then dialling. The grouping into twos or threes is fairly immaterial, but I can't understand where the convention arose to read out phone numbers with hundreds, tens and units weighting to the digits in each group "one hundred and thirty seven" rather than "one two three". Especially for German or Dutch where the tens and units are reversed (one extra stage of disentangling). As a matter of interest, what is the convention in France, Germany etc for reading out other streams of digits such as credit card numbers, electricity or gas account numbers etc - are those grouped into twos and read out as tens-and-units? Or are they read out as separate digits, with a pause every two or three digits? |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
"Ian Jackson" wrote in message
... French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). To add to the confusion, two of the letters in your French '20' are also consistently reversed! Apologies. At least I was consistent... ly wrong ;-) Vingt. Vingt. Vingt. I'll write 100 lines before bedtime ;-) Part of the problem is that I've looked at the spelling of both so many times now that mine actually looks "right" and the other looks "wrong". I have a sneaking suspicion that I may have been mis-spelling it for a loooooong time - maybe I got it wrong at school and it was never picked up, and the habit has stuck. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
"NY" wrote in message ... "Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/ spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. That’s my big gripe, order numbers and tracking numbers which are just a massive great 20 or 30 digit number. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I don’t find that and remember my 8 digit landline number fine and the first 4 digit group of the mobile number fine. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). Likely just habit, how they learned to do it. German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - English used to too but that has died out now. you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Same with time, ten to 12 etc. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. Likely he is dyslexic. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). Wogs should speak english. |
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How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
"Peter Able" wrote in message ... On 14/05/2021 14:03, Pamela wrote: On 13:50 14 May 2021, NY said: "Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). German has the problem of its "four and twenty blackbirds" reversal of tens and units - you hear drei-und-siebzig (three and seventy) but you write down 73 in the opposite order. Most Germans have a mental buffer, waiting until they hear both numbers in the pair before writing down the digits. But I noticed one German writing down the digits in the order that he heard them: first the units, then the tens digit to the left of it; skip three spaces forwards for next unit and back one for tens. This three-steps-forwards, one-step-back thing seemed to be very cumbersome. French falls foul of ambiguity because of its quatre-vignts notation for 80: quatre vignts dix could be any of: quatre-vignts-dix-huit (98) quatre-vignts dix-huit (80 18) A pause makes all the difference. I imagine that French speakers make a very exaggerated pause in the second case to avoid ambiguity, whereas almost no pause is needed between non-ambiguous pairs such as vignt-huit trente-quatre (28 34). I notice on the continent people often quote the digits of a phone number in pairs, whereas the UK tends to quote a number in groups of three digits. I originally put it down to how their phone company laid out the digits but I think it's more widespread than that. Personally, I kind of visualise and alomst recognise the SIGHT of digit-pairs but I remember digit-triplets mainly by their SOUND. As already said, it may be structurally easier to work in digit pairs or triplets - or a mixture. Surely the only rule is that it is discourteous to confirm back a number NOT in the format first spoken. E.g. 23 93 73 confirmed back as 239 373 ! Yeah, I find that a real nuisance but presumably thats how its shown on their screen when you tell them the number and they read it back to confirm it. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
"Chris Green" wrote in message ... In uk.d-i-y Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. I have a virtual mobile number for these, so they arrive in my E-Mail and can be cut+paste to their destination. No memory required! :-) One of mine completely automatically fills in the field in the app. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
Pamela wrote
Chris wrote NY wrote If I confirm any 10 digit number (phone number or otherwise) I would divide it into groups of 2 or 4 digits. I would never use a combination that switched between a group with an even number of digits and a group of 3 digits. For example: 4+4+2 or 4+2+4 etc is okay. But 3+3+4 is not. Our mobile numbers are mostly shown as 4+3+3 and most say it like that and no one appears to have any problem with it. On the other hand, a 9 digit number gets special treatment (from me!) and is preferably spken as 3 groups of 3 digits. I've heard people use the weirdest groupings for 8 digit bank account number, when there's nothing simpler than 4+4 digits. Add a bit of rising intonation at the end of each 4 digit group and it's a doddle to convey. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
Pamela wrote:
On 14:58 14 May 2021, Peter Able said: Surely the only rule is that it is discourteous to confirm back a number NOT in the format first spoken. E.g. 23 93 73 confirmed back as 239 373 ! It may seem so but digit grouping that's easier to recall (which is what some people like to emphasise) is not the same as conventional digit grouping when you want to confirm you've understood a number. For example, Three Mobile customer service is: 0 33333 8 1001 That may be handy to remember after you have heard it enough times but for a simple one-off confirmation it's messy because it breaks the usual rhythm when speaking such numbers. Nor can you easily confirm it fits the usual landline format of 5+6 digits. I prefer: 03333 381 001. Chunking comes with it, some RLE (run length encoding) by the operator. You can be remembering the first cluster as "zero and four threes". There is a tendency to chunk such that repeated digits are at the beginning ot the end of the chunk. As if doing it as "an RLE bit plus a sound". Humans are both crafty... and lazy. Paul |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
2 at a time for me, but I hate it since when its gabbled in audio, its just
not so clear as its read as a number. I wish they would say it or put it on the text in groups of two. That way it would be fine. The ones I hate are those that expire in one minute and I never make the time limit. Remember I have to power up the blue tooth keyboard, then listen to the text a couple of times, then find the field to type it into on the page them type it in. Its a bit like these automated telephone number recognition things, Any noise and it falls out and asks again. When I have to read a card number this way, I need to listen to each group and then repeat it, and the device hears the words from my dictation machine and gets it wrong. These systems do not think of older people or indeed those who need to be prompted or are in noisy places. Design flaw. I am fighting Apples latest security at the moment which when I look at passwords gives advice about passwords being week or using common words or sequences, and threatens to use its own totally unmemorable ones, but forgetting that you have devices on Windows with the same passwords and you would then have to go about changing everything over manually. It complains if you use the log in with my google account as a data leak since the password has been used more than once, and as you say, if you use an extra verification as well it just makes it far more hassle to do anything at all. Result? You do not do anything that uses bank or other sensitive info on line at all, but the banks keep on cutting their phone staff and you cannot do things that way either. Bah Humbug. Brian -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "Pamela" wrote in message ... A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14 May 2021 at 13:50:14 BST, ""NY"" wrote:
"Theo" wrote in message ... In uk.telecom.mobile Pamela wrote: A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. It depends on the structure of the number. eg: 55-67-99 132-231 1000-44 9-88888 27-288-9 Yes, if the number is already separated by hyphens/spaces, those are the chunks that I try to memorise. Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. I'm not sure why the UK read a chunk as a stream of digits (one-two-seven [pause] three-four-one) whereas European countries assign tens-and-units significance to pairs of digits (twelve [pause] seventy-three [pause] forty-one). snip My satnav does that to three and four digit road numbers. I must admit I thought it must be an Americanism. -- Roger Hayter |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14/05/2021 13:16, Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. I write it down. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
Brian Gaff (Sofa) wrote
2 at a time for me, but I hate it since when its gabbled in audio, its just not so clear as its read as a number. I wish they would say it or put it on the text in groups of two. That way it would be fine. I break up the big numbers into groups of 3. The ones I hate are those that expire in one minute and I never make the time limit. Remember I have to power up the blue tooth keyboard, then listen to the text a couple of times, then find the field to type it into on the page them type it in. Its a bit like these automated telephone number recognition things, Any noise and it falls out and asks again. Havent come across any like that. Our post office works the other way. When you tell the original automated thing that answers the original call and say the reason you called is about a parcel delivery, it asks you if the tracking number ends in the last 4 digits stated. Never had to give them the full number because it always has the one I am having a problem with so far. When I have to read a card number this way, I need to listen to each group and then repeat it, and the device hears the words from my dictation machine and gets it wrong. These systems do not think of older people Ours does. or indeed those who need to be prompted or are in noisy places. Design flaw. Never tried ours in a noisy place, my house is nice and quiet. I am fighting Apples latest security at the moment which when I look at passwords gives advice about passwords being week or using common words or sequences, and threatens to use its own totally unmemorable ones, Never seen that with my iphone, only sites complaining. but forgetting that you have devices on Windows with the same passwords and you would then have to go about changing everything over manually. It complains if you use the log in Log in with what ? with my google account as a data leak since the password has been used more than once, and as you say, if you use an extra verification as well it just makes it far more hassle to do anything at all. Result? You do not do anything that uses bank or other sensitive info on line at all, I use the fingerprint touch ID for all of mine. but the banks keep on cutting their phone staff and you cannot do things that way either. I hate using bank staff and hardly ever need to. Bah Humbug. "Pamela" wrote in message ... A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. |
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How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On Friday, 14 May 2021 at 13:55:02 UTC+1, NY wrote:
Apparently when the GPO started issuing phone numbers that were longer than a couple of digits, they did some research and found that people could remember chunks of either 2 or 3 digits, but a 4-digit chunk was harder to remember. Around thirty years ago, I moved to a house in a small town - and had a four-digit phone number. In itself, not a problem, but everyone else in the town only had three digit numbers. Others in the town would keep making mistakes and dropping one or other digit because they simply assumed all numbers had three digits. Obviously all now long gone. |
How do you memorise 6-digit authentication codes?
On 14/05/2021 13:16, Pamela wrote:
A web site sends you 6-digit number to your phone to check your ID. Do you memorise this by saying to yourself: 12-34-56 or 123-456? It's a genuine question to see what number span people are using to remember random numbers. I found the problem more difficult when I had to enter the number into an app on my phone to buy a ticket at a Swiss railway station. -- Michael Chare |
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