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The Bernoulli Distribution: Intuitive Understanding

Posted on May 5, 2020 Written by The Cthaeh 1 Comment

A portrait of Jacob Bernoulli with a 17th century Swiss coin in the background

In today’s post, I’m going to give you intuition about the Bernoulli distribution. This is one of the simplest and yet most famous discrete probability distributions. Not only that, it is the basis of many other more complex distributions.

This post is part of my series on discrete probability distributions.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Probability Distributions Tagged With: Bernoulli distribution, Coin flip, Law of large numbers, Mean, Probability mass, Variance

The Birth and Evolution of Cryptographic Codes

Posted on May 1, 2020 Written by The Cthaeh Leave a Comment

Cryptography, historical series, part 4 (Alfred Dreyfus & Mary, Queen of Scots in the background)

Welcome to part 4 of my series on cryptography! After taking an in-depth look into ciphers in the previous two posts, now it’s time to delve into the other big category of cryptographic methods. So, this week’s post is going to be about cryptographic codes.

This post is part of my series Cryptography: Historical Intro & Combinatoric Analysis.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Combinatorics, Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Tagged With: Code, History

Vigenère and the Age of Polyalphabetic Ciphers

Posted on April 20, 2020 Written by The Cthaeh Leave a Comment

Cryptography, historical series, part 3 (Vigenère portrait in the background)

In this week’s post, I’m going to introduce you to the world of polyalphabetic substitution ciphers. And to the most famous cipher from this category: the Vigenère cipher.

This post is part of my series Cryptography: Historical Intro & Combinatoric Analysis.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Combinatorics, Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Tagged With: Cipher, History

The Column and Caesar Ciphers: Ancient Cryptography

Posted on April 13, 2020 Written by The Cthaeh Leave a Comment

Cryptography, historical series, part 2 (Roman and Spartan statues in the background)

Today, I’m going to introduce two ciphers from the dawn of cryptography: the column cipher and the Caesar cipher. These ciphers illustrate some of the first human ideas in the direction of cryptographic thought.

This post is part of my series Cryptography: Historical Intro & Combinatoric Analysis.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Combinatorics, Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Tagged With: Cipher, History

Cryptography: Historical Introduction & Combinatoric Analysis (Series)

Posted on April 6, 2020 Written by The Cthaeh 1 Comment

Cryptography, historical series, part 1 (the Kryptos sculpture in the background)

Hi everyone, and welcome to my series on cryptography!

Initially, I started writing this as a single post, but as I was planning what I wanted to include, and seeing how long it would become, I decided it’s best to split it into separate posts.

Cryptography is the study of techniques and procedures, such as using codes and ciphers, for secure (secret) communication between two or more agents. More specifically, it deals with finding sophisticated ways of hiding the true content of messages exchanged between communicators. People use cryptography in military and diplomatic communication, password protection, securing online transactions, as well as in any other context where some secret information needs to be protected from being accessed or understood.

As you’ll see in future posts, probability theory too can play an important role in cryptography.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Combinatorics, Cryptography & Cryptanalysis Tagged With: Cipher, Code, History

Discrete Probability Distributions: Overview (Series)

Posted on October 30, 2019 Written by The Cthaeh 4 Comments

A discrete probability distribution, two hands holding dice, and a background referencing the movie The Matrix

In my previous two posts I sketched the frame of the big picture around probability distributions. In my introductory post I gave some intuition about the general concept and talked about the two major kinds: discrete and continuous distributions. And in the follow-up post I related the concepts of mean and variance to probability distributions. I showed that this connection itself goes through two fundamental concepts from probability theory: the law of large numbers and expected value.

Now I want to build on all these posts. My plan is to start introducing commonly used discrete and continuous distributions in separate posts dedicated to each one. And I want to start with the former, since they are significantly easier to understand.

The goal of the current post is to be a final warm-up before delving into the details of specific distributions.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Probability Distributions Tagged With: Coin flip, Probability mass, Sample space

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