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* '''PiFast''', by Xavier Gourdon was the fastest program for [[Microsoft Windows]] in 2003. According to its author, it can compute one million digits in 3.5 seconds on a 2.4 GHz [[Pentium 4]].<ref>http://numbers.computation.free.fr/Constants/PiProgram/timings.html</ref> PiFast can also compute other irrational numbers like ''[[e (mathematical constant)|e]]'' and [[square root of two|√2]]. It can also work at lesser efficiency with very little memory (down to a few tens of megabytes to compute well over a billion (10<sup>9</sup>) digits). This [[closed source]] [[freeware]] tool is a popular benchmark in the [[overclock]]ing community. PiFast 4.4 is available from Stu's Pi Page. PiFast 4.3 is available from Gourdon's page.
* '''QuickPi''' v4.5 Alpha 12 by Steve Pagliarulo for Windows is faster than PiFast for runs of under 400,000,000 digits. Version 4.5 is not
==Most digits calculated on a home computer==
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