Binary, Hanoi and Sierpinski, part 1
Binary counting can solve the towers of Hanoi puzzle, and if this isn't surprising enough, it can lead to a method for finding a curve that fills Sierpinski's triangle (which I get to in part 2). Thanks to Desmos for their help in supporting this video. They're hiring, and anyone interested should check out https://www.desmos.com/careers Thanks to all Patreon supporters as well, you can support and get early access to future "Essence of" series here: / 3blue1brown I also want to give a special shoutout to the following patrons: CrypticSwarm, Ali Yahya, Dave Nicponski, Juan Batiz-Benet, Yu Jun, Othman Alikhan, Markus Persson, Joseph John Cox, Luc Ritchie, Einar Wikheim Johansen, Rish Kundalia, Achille Brighton, Kirk Werklund, Ripta Pasay, Felipe Diniz, Chris, Curtis Mitchell, Ari Royce, Bright , Myles Buckley, Robert P Zuckett, Andy Petsch, Otavio good, Karthik T, Steve Muench, Viesulas Sliupas, Steffen Persch, Brendan Shah, Andrew Mcnab, Matt Parlmer, Naoki Orai, Dan Davison, Jose Oscar Mur-Miranda, Aidan Boneham, Brent Kennedy, Henry Reich, Sean Bibby, Paul Constantine, Justin Clark, Mohannad Elhamod, Denis, Ben Granger, Jeffrey Herman, Jacob Young.

Binary, Hanoi, and Sierpinski, part 2

Reinventing Entropy | Compression is Intelligence Part 1

When Math Isn’t Based in Reality

Fractals are typically not self-similar

The 4-Page Paper That Broke Mathematics

Chaos Game - Numberphile

Key to the Tower of Hanoi - Numberphile

The most beautiful formula not enough people understand

Olympiad level counting (Generating functions)

Catalan Numbers - Numberphile

This is 0 Elo Chess

Towers of Hanoi: A Complete Recursive Visualization

Why this puzzle is impossible

How (and why) to take a logarithm of an image

Amazing Graphs - Numberphile

Why colliding blocks compute pi

63 and -7/4 are special - Numberphile

Winding numbers and domain coloring

The Oldest Unsolved Problem in Math

