MAYBE ANOTHER KEY:
The real interesting thing is whether they were playing with numbers over there.
In Europe, "," (commas) are used to represent a "." decimal point here.
So 1,000 votes could technically be written as 1.000 !!!
Maybe they were shooting numbers between servers to shrink President Trump's voting numbers and enlarging alleged CRIMINAL Joe's.
Wow,
now that would be quite a scam!!!
Must investigate this ploy right away.
See (number examples):
"Die Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika ...gemessen an der Fläche von 9,83 Millionen Quadratkilometern ..."
( https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vereinigte_Staaten )
( German Wikipedia article of United States of America )
It would probably depend on whether or not the software was specifically configured for U.S.A.
Plus, depending on the skill and competency of possible foreign agents with our method of numerical representation, the software used could have intermediate "glitches."
Where have I heard that word before?
If the software developers were even slightly competent, they wouldn't be sending the data as ASCII, it would be in binary format making the decimal vs comma usage irrelevant.
Easy when they never exist physically. Move some decimal points around on a server in Frankfurt and voila.
MAYBE ANOTHER KEY: The real interesting thing is whether they were playing with numbers over there.
In Europe, "," (commas) are used to represent a "." decimal point here. So 1,000 votes could technically be written as 1.000 !!!
Maybe they were shooting numbers between servers to shrink President Trump's voting numbers and enlarging alleged CRIMINAL Joe's.
Wow,
now that would be quite a scam!!!
Must investigate this ploy right away.
See (number examples):
"Die Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika ...gemessen an der Fläche von 9,83 Millionen Quadratkilometern ..."
( https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vereinigte_Staaten )
( German Wikipedia article of United States of America )
Interesting idea. You'd get a runtime error on numbers greater than 999,999. E.g. 123.456.789.
It would probably depend on whether or not the software was specifically configured for U.S.A.
Plus, depending on the skill and competency of possible foreign agents with our method of numerical representation, the software used could have intermediate "glitches."
Where have I heard that word before?
If the software developers were even slightly competent, they wouldn't be sending the data as ASCII, it would be in binary format making the decimal vs comma usage irrelevant.