John, I was gonna let this post go but I just can't ....sorry mate.A computer on its own, is never random. NEVER!
If you picked those numbers a billion times, certain numbers would come out more than others and the nature of the 'random' algorithm would come unravveled.
The most common randomisation technique uses human input.
Such as mouse movements, which provide the numbers going into the algorithm (the seed).
A random seed can produce a random result.
Other ways in electronics to produce randomness is using noise.
Noise is a product of many things, including radio waves emmitted from the big bang. So its quite reliably random.
Noise produced by some semiconductors is random on a quantum level.
So with a random seed a computer can be random.
Some people may think my reply is pedantic but I am sure you are aware, if you jump into this thread, or in fact into this forum, when you state something, then it has to be as near as one can make it, skeptic resistant.
The idea of anything being random is something that is in my understanding, pattern free.
It seems ironic to me that you quote the background radiation interference from the big bang as random when it was a bunch of scientists looking for the smoking gun of a 'pattern' in the sky to finally validate the big bang.
It could be argued, that if we knew the initial conditions, we could well predict the interference 'seed' you would look to as your random input.