This is a front-end for the Online Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, made by Christian Perfect. The idea is to provide OEIS entries in non-ancient HTML, and then to think about how they're presented visually. The source code is on GitHub.
%I A018188 #18 Dec 20 2022 22:50:27 %S A018188 5003,5987,6563,9803,10427,11027,11867,16763,19403,22283,22907,24923, %T A018188 25667,29867,35747,40427,40763,41243,42083,49307,54323,54347,57203, %U A018188 57347,66587,67307,73883,78203,84347,104003,112067,121403 %N A018188 The $620 prime list. %C A018188 Numbers are 11 mod 24. %C A018188 Jon Grantham: "I strongly believe that some sub-product of these primes is a Carmichael number and a Lucas pseudoprime for the Fibonacci sequence, and also is 2 or 3 mod 5." %C A018188 In particular the above conjecture implies that there is a BPSW pseudoprime smaller than 10^25286. - _Charles R Greathouse IV_, Sep 28 2019 %H A018188 Charles R Greathouse IV, <a href="/A018188/b018188.txt">Table of n, a(n) for n = 1..2030</a> %H A018188 Jon Grantham, <a href="http://www.pseudoprime.com/pseudo.html">Pseudoprimes/Probable Primes</a> %Y A018188 Subsequence of A107007 (and hence A000040). %K A018188 nonn,fini,full %O A018188 1,1 %A A018188 _N. J. A. Sloane_, Jon Grantham (grantham(AT)math.uga.edu) %E A018188 b-file from _Charles R Greathouse IV_, Aug 28 2010