The Fed says this is a cube of $1M. They're off by half a million

原始链接: https://calvin.sh/blog/fed-lie/

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原文

At the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s Money Museum, there’s a big transparent cube on display. It’s filled with tightly packed stacks of $1\$1 bills, claiming to contain $1,000,000\$1,000,000

The plaque proudly declares:

Have you ever wondered what one million dollars looks like? You don’t have to wonder anymore because you can see it right in front of you!

But I don’t trust signs. I trust counting.

The Big Count

I first tried counting the stacks right there in the room. The cube was tall, so I had to step back to see the whole thing, squinting at the stacks, trying to follow each row. I lost track almost immediately.

Also, people were starting to look at me funny. Apparently, staring intensely at a pile of cash while muttering numbers isn’t normal museum behavior.

Then, I tried with a photo. I zoomed all the way in on my phone, dragging my finger across the screen, mentally tallying as I went.

Still couldn’t keep count.

All I wanted was a way to click on things in a photo and have the number go up.

You’d think this would already exist, a browser based tool for counting things.

Turns out it… doesn’t. At least, not as a web app I can find on Google.

There are some clunky old Windows programs, niche scientific tools, and image analysis software that assumes you’re trying to count cells under a microscope, not people, penguins, or stacks of $1 bills in a Federal Reserve cube.

So I made Dot Counter.

It’s stupidly simple: upload an image, click to drop a dot, and it tells you how many you’ve placed. That’s it. But somehow, nothing like it existed.

I originally made it to investigate this very cube, but I figured other people might need to count stuff in pictures.

Now it’s yours too.

Go forth. Count wisely.

Count your enemies. Count your blessings. Count your stacks of cash.

Because when someone tells you it’s a million dollars, you might want to double check.

Final Tally

A large transparent cube filled with stacks of $1 bills is displayed at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago's Money Museum. The cube is labeled as containing one million dollars. Overlaid on the image are colored annotations measuring the cube’s dimensions: the red diagonal face is labeled "102", the blue vertical edge is labeled "19", and the green horizontal edge is labeled "8". These measurements represent the number of bill stacks in each dimension, indicating the cube holds significantly more than one million dollars.

Assuming each bundle contains 100100 bills*, that’s

102×8×19×$100=$1,550,400102 × 8 × 19 × \$ 100 = \$ 1,550,400
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