Mr
Francis Isaac who is the pioneer of this site went to Essex University in
Colchester. He studied Chemistry by research. His project at Essex University
was to create new organometallic compounds, which can be used to cure or ease
the pain of Alzheimer's disease sufferer.
Having
completed his Masters degree in Chemistry on the 15th July 1993 and in view of
the fact that there was no funding available to do PhD in chemistry, Mr. Isaac
then decided to continue doing research in any subject of interest.
The
UK lottery started on the 19th November 1994 and that was when Mr Isaac started
to study the Lottery System.
The
first book Mr Isaac bought and studied was the Lottery Numbers Book by Ron
Shelly.
This
book gave a list of all the previously drawn lottery numbers from 1978 to 1996
in every state in the United States of America.
Although
the six numbers were from different lottery machines drawn from different
states in the United States of America, Mr Isaac was able to see all the
previously drawn lottery numbers arranged in an orderly fashion.
The
second Book Mr Isaac read is entitled:
Mathematics
and the Unexpected by Ivar Ekeland
This
book explains in great detail, the unexpected things that can happen and how
Mathematics can help to understand and explain some of these unexpected events.
What
Mr Isaac was looking for was how to be certain in an uncertain event and what
this mean is that if an event is taking place and you are part of that event,
how can you the observer influence that event somehow so that you are chosen by
that event.
The
lottery is a game of chance although most people play this game as if it is all
based on luck and nothing else. What Mr Isaac was looking for was how you can
increase your chances of being the actual winner of this game of chance.
He
then went on to read a book entitled:
Searching
for Certainty by John L Casti
This
book spoke about how to be certain in an uncertain event. It is actually a
paradoxical book but in it the author spoke about chance and certainty.
Another
Book that Mr Isaac also read is entitled:
The
presence of the past by Rupert Sheldrake
This
book gave Mr Isaac the idea that if a system is releasing six number
combination on a weekly basis, by collecting this six numbers, yes, it is
possible to predict a six number combination that will come out at some point
in the future.
Various
other books that Mr Isaac read in the course of his research to understanding
the 6/49 lotteries are listed below:
-
Complexity by Roger Lewin
-
Complexification by John L. Casti
-
The Mind of God by Paul Davies
-
In search of Schrodinger's Cat (Quantum Physics And Reality) by John Gribbin
-
Schrodinger's Kittens by John Gribbin
-
The Emperor's New Mind by Roger Penrose
-
Shadow of the Mind by Roger Penrose
-
The Character of Physical Law by Richard P Feynman
-
A Brief History of Time by Professor Stephen Hawking
-
The Universe in a Nutshell by Professor Stephen Hawking
-
The Architecture of Chance (An Introduction to the Logic and Arithmetic of
Probability) by Richard Lowry
-
The Empire of Chance (How probability Changed science and Everyday life) by
Gerd Gigerenzer, Zeno Swijtink, Theodore Porter, Lorraine Daston, John Beatty
and Lorenz Kruger
-
Taking Chances (Winning with Probability) by John Haigh
-
Chance Rules (An Informal Guide to Probability, Risk, and Statistics) by Brian
S. Everitt
-
Fearful Symmetry (Is God A Geometer) by Ian Stewart an Martin Golubitsky
-
The National Lottery Book (Winning Strategies) by Sam Weren
-
The Basics of Winning Lotto/Lottery by Professor Jones
-
How to Win The Lottery (The Essential Guide) by Dr. M. Harding
-
The National Lottery (How to Maximise Your Chances of Winning a Prize) by D. J.
Lawrence
-
The Penguin Dictionary of Curious and Interesting Numbers by David Wells
-
Winning Perms for Lottery Jackpots (including Revolutionary Lottery Guarantee
Entries) by Gwilym Roberts
-
Your Key to Regular Wins on the National Lottery by Dennis Jones
-
Moonwalk By Michael Jackson.
If
you want to discuss the 6/49 Lotteries with Mr Isaac, his advice is that you
can start by buying and reading everyone of the book listed above.
Before
reading all this book Mr Isaac started to think that there must be some law
that connects each six lottery number results with one another and that was how
he discover the sum of numbers.
His
question was what if you can find all the six number combinations that add up
to a particular sum and then collect all the six numbers that add up to that
sum. If you play the entire sum, one day, that sum will come out and then
because you have collected the entire sum you will be a winner.
Although
Mr Isaac was working for a plating company, he wanted a job with a company that
specialises in research because his area of expertise is research.
On
searching through teletext, his girlfriend found him a job with an agency in
Basingstoke where he was placed with a local micro-biological company.
After
six months, a research position in the chemistry department became vacant and
Mr Isaac was interviewed for this position.
Mr
Roger Fowler, who was the chemistry Manager at the time, decided to give Mr
Isaac the job on a permanent contract.
The job
was to develop new and improved microbiological ‘tryptone' products for the
company and the project was known as the tryptone project.
The job was in Basingstoke and Mr Isaac was a residence of Bournemouth town at
the time, so, he decided to share the journey with a friend who already had a
job in Basingstoke.
Mr Isaac’s friend chose to remain anonymous but it was during their
journey to Basingstoke which took about an hour that they started to discuss
the UK 6/49 Lottery system and various other 6/49 Lottery systems around the
World.
When Mr Isaac’s friend had about his mathematical and scientific ideas
regarding how to increase your chances and be certain of winning five and the
bonus number and/ or the jackpot, they both decided to write a computer
program.
Mr Isaac’s friend is a computer programmer and together, they design a
computer program in order to see if Mr Isaac’s hypothesis is
theoretically possible.
The program merely confirms what Mr Isaac already know and although the program
does help to shed some new light into the understanding of the 6/49 lottery
systems, it was extremely frustrating to run the program because it was very
slow and needed upgrading.
Mr
Isaac has now commission another program to be written which will be much
faster and can be upgraded on a regular basis.
The
whole idea about the 6/49 lottery systems started as a hobby and nothing more.
It started as a scientific idea but we have now discovered the financial
implication of the theory.
We can see the financial implication of the theory but it depends on how
successful our organisation, with Mr Isaac as the head of that organisation, is
at persuading the lottery players to change their attitude towards how they
choose their 6/49 lottery numbers.
Although it has been stated in services that we are only looking for 12 members
to join Lottery Chance Syndicate, we will consider taking on more members
should the interest from the 6/49 lottery players become overwhelming, as we
believe that it will.
If you have already join a lottery syndicate, we have to tell you that you have
made a big mistake and should consider relinquishing your membership of that
syndicate immediately and come and join Lottery Chance Syndicate.
If you are one of the people who just goes to the shop and pick a lottery
ticket or several lottery tickets and then start choosing your six number
combinations at random before you then enter the 6/49 lottery draws, the
majority of you who chooses their number this way can forget ever winning big
payout.
For those of you who are thinking, how do we know that the majority of you do
not have a chance of winning, we have all done it that way before because that
is the only way we all know how, until we studied and understood the 6/49
lottery systems fully.
We will never play by lucky dip or by just choosing any six number combinations
at random again because they are a waste of time and money since they will
never give the majority of players the chance to win five plus the bonus number
and / or the jackpot.
For those of you who are thinking why should I join or even take the chance of
playing the 6/49 lottery, remember that none of us are safe in our jobs.
The boss of your company may decide that redundancy is absolutely essential in
order for the company to increase efficiency and profit and you may be the one
who will be made redundant.
For people who are in business and are thinking that they have a successful
business and do not need to join Lottery Chance Syndicate, remember that
economic climate and interest rate is always changing and this may affect your
business so badly that you may be force to consider bankruptcy.
You must take a chance to secure your future because nothing is impossible if
you believe it.
Every combination that we give out to our syndicate members will have a
fantastic chance of winning five plus the bonus number and/or the jackpot. This
is absolutely guaranteed. The only thing that we cannot guarantee is which one
of the combinations that we give out will come out first and that is the only
risk that you have to take.
Do
not waste your money playing combinations that will never come out in a million
years. You deserve to give yourself a better chance of winning so, why not join
Lottery Chance Syndicate immediately.
Anyway,
later on during our journey to Basingstoke, another computer programmer joined
us with a fine and impressive programming knowledge. His name is Mr Dave
McFarlane.
Mr
Dave McFarlane graduated in computer studies in 1996 from the Southampton
Institute.
Mr
McFarlane is always there to discuss and to write further programs in
understanding the Lottery system. It was Mr McFarlane who wrote a program in
understanding three number combinations but this work has not finished yet.
Whenever
Mr Isaac has any problem regarding his computer, Mr McFarlane is always at hand
to help solve the problems.
Mr
Isaac has not fully utilised the full computer mind of Mr Dave McFarlane and
would like to do so at some point in the future.
Mr
Isaac's intention is to continue to look at all the different lotteries from
around the World and bring out solutions to all the different lotteries,
although he does accept that there will be a limit to being able to understand
every single lottery games.
In
the meantime, Mr Isaac's interest is in understanding fully and completely, the
6/49 Lottery draw in every Country from United Kingdom to Germany and then to
Canada.
If
you reside in Canada and you can get your hand on all the 6/49 lottery draws
since the draw began in Canada, Mr Isaac would like to hear from you.
If
you reside in Ireland and you have the entire lottery draws from Ireland since
the lottery began in that country, Mr Isaac would like to hear from you as
well.
The
Irish lottery is interesting to Mr Isaac because it has less combination and
hereby giving the punters a better chance of winning.
It
is this website’s goal to stop the punters from choosing random six numbers or
picking any six number combinations and keep on hoping for luck, although it
will be very difficult to change human attitude and human perception.
Most
people’s perception of the lottery is wrong, but there are always those who
likes the idea of discussing about a topic they have not done any research into
and therefore do not know anything about.
Mr
Isaac looks forward to anyone who is ready and prepared to discuss with him on
the 6/49 lottery systems. This will give Mr Isaac the opportunity to impress
the sceptics with his knowledge on the 6/49 lottery systems.
Mr
Isaac would like to show his appreciation to Mr. Roger Fowler who gave him the
job in Basingstoke
Mr
Isaac would also like to thank Professor J. R. Dilworth who provided the
funding needed for Mr Isaac's Masters Degree in Chemistry at Essex University.
It
is his understanding that Professor J. R. Dilworth is now a lecturer of
Inorganic Chemistry at Oxford University.
Finally,
it is important to say that without Professor John Dilworth's help in providing
funding for Mr Isaac's Masters Degree in Chemistry, none of the work here would
have been possible.
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