In the digital age, memorization is a lost art. Remember a phone
number? Pfff. Go back to 1980. A password? There’s an app for that.
Friends’ birthdays? Facebook has you covered.
But at the World Memory Championships, the brute force power of the
brain to store data is all that matters. This year the champion, Johannes Mallow of Germany, memorized a number with 2,245 digits in an hour and a number with 500 digits in five minutes (a new world record).
And those are just some of the feats he achieved. Along with some 75
other participants from two-dozen countries, Mallow was tasked with
eight other memory exercises including: the hour cards category where
competitors have 60 minutes to memorize as many full decks of cards as
they can (Mallow memorized 1144 cards), the words category where
participants have 15 minutes to memorize as many random words as
possible (Simon Reinhard won that with 269 words), and the binary
challenge where participants have 30 minutes to memorize a sequence of
binary digits (Mallow strung together 3954 digits).
For the rest of the story: http://www.wired.com/rawfile/2013/01/david-vintiner-world-memory-championships/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+wired%2Findex+%28Wired%3A+Top+Stories%29
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