                    About the Coin Toss Simulator                                                                                                               The Coin Toss Simulator is a simple demonstration of the computer's             ability to generate random numbers and the Author's ability to tap into         that. You can use this program in 2 different ways. You can try to              understand the concept of randomness and the concept of "simulation" by         carefully observing this program. The other possibility that you went           through the Simulator and the related written material, you understand          the results but you don't understand the basic concept. The Coin Toss           Simulator should help you in that.                                                                                                                              It is very straightforward and simple program. The computer is instructed       to generate a random number, but not smaller than 1 and not larger than         2. Thus the computer randomly comes up with 1s and 2s. It can be                interpreted as head and tail after flipping a coin. There is an                 "animated" display of the actual program code where it all happens. You         will have to press F5 to activate it or deactivate it.                                                                                                          Pick 1000 flips and 1 run. Observe the results and press R to repeat it.        Observe the slight differences. The differences indicate the randomness,        the slightness indicates the universal mathematical rule of "long run",         based on which out of 1000 flips, near half and half will be heads and          tails. The very same principles are used in the AIDS Simulator.               