Google-Sponsored 2004 US Puzzle Championship 115
kublai kahn writes "On the NPR Weekend
Edition Sunday puzzle segment this past weekend, Will Shortz mentioned
the 2004 US Puzzle Championship,
sponsored by Google. Registration
closes on Thursday 17 June, and the competition is conducted online on
Saturday 19 June. "The top two US contestants will be selected to
join the US Team at the World Puzzle Championship in Opatija,
Croatia. Prizes will be awards to the top US contestants." (This was
mentioned on Slashdot last
year as well.) I'll be away from my internet connection over the
weekend, but perhaps others from the Slashdot crowd can compete.
Check the practice
test to see if it's your cup of tea."
Hmmm (Score:5, Funny)
Away...
uh...
I just don't get it.
<grrr>
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Guess he's scared of the Internet; he probably thinks it's going to laugh at his looks and make fun of his hobbies.
Not that it ever happened to me, just saying, just saying...
/. effect (Score:5, Funny)
Re:/. effect (Score:3, Funny)
I won, I won !! woohooo !!
Re:/. effect (Score:3, Funny)
Re:/. effect (Score:5, Funny)
That one is easy: First put the PDF download URL on a rotating link. Then for each visitor check to see if the referrer is slashdot.org, if not offer the download URL, if so then redirect these users to a random URL within the slashdot archives. In the time it takes someone to not be an asshole and post a mirror you will have made it over the hump and in the process burned a bit of the slashdot site bandwidth in return for the "favor" they granted you...
I am really surprised that this is not offered as a standard option on Apache.
Re:/. effect (Score:2)
There was a time penalty if you submitted your answers after the deadline. I tried submitting mine with about 3-4 minutes to spare, and I got nothing on the connection for at least 10 minutes. Unfortunatly, they didn't give you a breakdown per individual on your scoring, so I don't know if I had a penalty or not.
I still did OK, around 350th place or so. I'm hoping they publish individual results this time.
Here's the test... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Here's the test... (Score:1)
Make sure you read the instructions! (Score:5, Funny)
Okay I'm out. My brain already hurts...
Re:Make sure you read the instructions! (Score:4, Funny)
The puzzle challenge is trying to comply with those instructions. I figure if you fork() the universe, and make one wait() for the other... hm...
Re:Make sure you read the instructions! (Score:2, Funny)
Puzzle 2 is finding a way to remain interested in some puzzle competition when you could be off Dalek bashing in your time machine.
(Sadly, I believe "The Puzzler" adventure of Doctor Who has been lost)
They better get *better* servers (Score:4, Interesting)
Gateway Timeout
The following error occurred:
A gateway timeout occurred. The server is unreachable. Retry the request. (GATEWAY_TIMEOUT)
Please contact the administrator.
Re:They better get *better* servers (Score:4, Funny)
Rule number one, all things are never equal.
Re:They better get *better* servers (Score:1)
Slashdot. News for nerds... melting servers from day one.
Servers melted (millions): 404
Re:They better get *better* servers (Score:1)
Shame on me! I didn't realize that the poster was none other than the famous "Anonymous Coward", who is as old as Slash... sorry, The Internet itself!!
user #784568 bows to you!! _O_
Re:They better get *better* servers (Score:1)
Sounds fun . . . (Score:5, Informative)
Good luck all.
Re:I got a puzzle for the puzzlers.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I got a puzzle for the puzzlers.. (Score:1)
Re:I got a puzzle for the puzzlers.. (Score:1)
Re:I got a puzzle for the puzzlers.. (Score:1)
An excerpt. (Score:5, Funny)
Think realistically here (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Think realistically here (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Think realistically here (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Think realistically here (Score:1)
"OMG I HATE APPLE. TEHY ARE THE SUXOR!@#"
"Shut up, bitch. Apple is the shit. In fact, Apple roxors jor boxors. Biatch."
-- or ---
"Meh."
"I disagree. Feh."
Re:Think realistically here (Score:1)
I love apple because of a, b, c, & d reasons.
Apple will never be more than niche computer for reasons 1, 2, 3, and 4.
IMHO.
Re:Think realistically here (Score:1)
Pfft! of course not! They just like to click the links. (RTFA, ha, what a maroon!)
Re:Think realistically here (Score:3, Funny)
The slashdotters who click on the links and those that post comments are disjoint sets.
Re:Think realistically here (Score:2)
The death of this server was foreordained from the moment the article was submitted.
Hope springs eternal... (Score:5, Funny)
At least I get some roasted avian out of the deal...
If you ever... (Score:5, Informative)
If you ever have the chance to hear Will Shortz speak in person, it is well worth it. If you have an interest in word puzzles, cross or otherwise, he is very interesting. Plus, he will usually play a game with the audience for a good amount of time.
I wonder... (Score:4, Insightful)
See Question 7 (Score:2)
Figuring this out is part of the test, I guess you wont be going.
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
I placed 5th in the Canadian qualifier. Two and a half weeks before the competition in Arnhem, I got an e-mail asking me if I wanted to join the team, as other members of the team, including alternates, had dropped out.
I rushed through my passport application. I got the time off work, luckily. But I wasn't able to find a reasonably-priced plan fare with notice that short, so I had to decline. On sale, one can get round trip from Vancouver to Amsterdam for six or seven hundred bucks Canadi
Today's puzzle test... (Score:2, Funny)
Questions... (Score:5, Informative)
1. Battleships - 5 points; 5 point bonus
Locate the position of the 10-ship fleet in the grid. The fleet is shown to the right of the grid: one 4-unit battleship, two 3-unit cruisers, three 2-unit destroyers, and four 1-unit submarines. Each segment of a ship occupies a single cell. Ships are oriented either horizontally or vertically, and they do not touch each other, not even diagonally. The numbers on the right and bottom edges of the grid reveal the total number of ship segments that appear in each respective row or column. (For solving purposes, ignore the letters above and the numbers left of the grid.)
2. Pentomino Division - 5 points
Divide each of the six shapes into two pieces so that each of the 12 Pentominoes (shown at right) is used exactly once. The Pentominoes can be rotated and/or reflected. Answer: Enter the letters pairs corresponding to each of the six original shapes.
3. Dutch Segway - 5 points
Which of the numbered drawings is an exact mirror image of the drawing in the upper left?
4. Corral - 20 points; 5 point bonus
Draw a single closed loop along the grid lines so that all the numbered squares are inside the loop. Additionally, each number equals the count of interior squares that are directly in line (horizontally or vertically) with that number's square, including the square itself. In the example, the square containing the 4 is directly in line with two squares above it and one square to its right. Including the square itself, the total count is four.
5. Rotator Mosaic - 20 points
Divide the grid (along the grid lines) into exactly 10 symmetric pieces (each appearing unchanged if rotated 180, including its shape and the pattern of any white or black disks).
6. A to Z Crisscross - 25 points; 5 point bonus
Place the 19 words into the grid in crisscross style (words appear either across or down, and all words formed in the grid appear in the word list), so that there are exactly 26 word intersections--each in one of the highlighted squares. Additionally, each of the letters from A to Z appears exactly once in the highlighted squares.
Last year... (Score:4, Interesting)
Hmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Looking at the practice test, I realize that I don't really like word puzzles. It's that last criss cross puzzle that got me. There's no general solution to word puzzles; you just arbitrarily try answers till you get it. And the final solution doesn't have any beauty.
Take the rotator puzzle. This is an interesting puzzle, and the algorithm to find the final solution may be very interesting indeed, even applicable in video processing and the like...
But don't include NP complete problems in your puzzle. I don't like them. The algorithm and method of solving isn't interesting or insightful, it's just boring and tedious.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Being a member of Mensa has saved me more than $300 over the past three years (cost of being a member for 3 years is around $115 or so), so from a strictly economical standpoint, it pays off -- the publications and interaction are just icing on the cake.
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Informative)
You know, you could have just gone to Geico [geico.com] and saved money on your car insurance.
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
For that matter, many classes of NP complete problems have good heuristics which will solve many of the cases (but not the cases built from other NP-complete problems). You can get a good rate of success on random or common problems with an algorithm which terminates in polynomial time, having found the correct solution 75% of the time and given up the other 25%, while never either running long or giving an incorrect answer.
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Solution to first puzzle... (Score:2, Informative)
Windows 2000 Microsoft-IIS/5.0 14-Jun-2004 199.165.204.120 Micro Serve
Hopefully they solve that one before the real contest starts.
Practice puzzle slashdotted but I copied it here: (Score:4, Funny)
The following might sound easy but it's harder than it sounds. The hardest puzzles are always the ones with the fewest rules!
PRACTICE PUZZLE
Join the dots with a line. There are only four rules:
1. Only straight lines are to be used (no curves, bends or corners)
2. These straight lines must start and end at a dot
3. You may only go through a dot one time
4. You may NOT intersect lines
5. You may NOT lift the pen from the paper during the process of solving the puzzle once you have laid it on the paper
Are you ready?
Here's the puzzle:
.
(NOTE: If you run out of ink once you start the puzzle you will be disqualified)
(NOTE 2: this is a 2-dimensional puzzle. Any attempts to solve this puzzle in three-dimensional space will result in disqualification.)
Scoring:
less than 3 minutes - Incredible! We recommend you take part in the competition. May we commend your parent's rearing skills!
3-6 minutes - Pretty good. If your skills in other types of puzzles are at this level or higher, we recommend signing up! You might have been deficient in some nutrients as a child.
6-12 minutes - Decent. If this type of puzzle is not your forté and you are better at others you might still have a chance.
12-20 minutes - Poor. Sorry, but your dot-connecting skills are not up to par with our competition. This is probably because you were dropped on your head as a baby.
Over 20 minutes - Abysmal. Your parents must have a postgraduate degree in any social sciences subject. Thus is life.
Re:Practice puzzle slashdotted but I copied it her (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Practice puzzle slashdotted but I copied it her (Score:2, Funny)
1. Only straight lines are to be used (no curves, bends or corners)
2. These straight lines must start and end at a dot
3. You may only go through a dot one time
4. You may NOT intersect lines
5. You may NOT lift the pen from the paper during the process of solving the puzzle once you have laid it on the paper
Are you ready?
"I see five rules"
"I'm sorry, but there are actually only four rules"
[ZOT!]
"AAAGGGGHHHHHHHH!!!!!"
Re:Practice puzzle slashdotted but I copied it her (Score:1)
password? (Score:1)
Uhh, so they put up a pdf [puzzles.com]... and it's password protected... and you can only see the preview... until they give you the password (released on their site at
Re:password? (Score:2)
Re:password? (Score:1)
Re:password? (Score:1)
Also, the point of the password protection is so that participants can download the actual puzzle file up to 1 day in advance of the test, but not read it until the test officially begins and the password for the real file is posted. (And it will be more complex than "worl
The Ultimate Google Puzzle Game (Score:3, Funny)
Boogle! Fun for the entire family! Do a hidden word search on each Google query!
Just to save you one /.ed page (Score:3, Informative)
Opatija, Croatia (Score:2)
It's not Will Shortz... (Score:5, Funny)
Compete Against Wei-Hwa? (Score:5, Interesting)
The puzzle's real answer will.... (Score:1)
It's in CROATIA!!! (Score:2, Funny)
sign me up...
Re:It's in CROATIA!!! (Score:1, Informative)
"What am I supposed to do for fun, cross the border and pick me up some romanian women???......"
You have no idea, don't slam a country you know nothing about. Croatia is where all the Europeans go for vacation because it is awes
Re:It's in CROATIA!!! (Score:2)
Middle of nowhere? Score: -1, ignoramus.
Croatia is just north of Italy, south of Austria (which is a whole different country than Australia, in case you were wondering), actually pretty much in the center of Europe. City of Opatija is less than 100 miles away from Venice (a city in Italy, not a beach in the US).
What am I supposed to do for fun, cross the border and pick me up some romanian women???......
Opatija is actually
Opt-Huh? (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, you have to love the opt-in selection on the registration page:
Click here if you would like to be contacted by Google regarding employment opportunities and other promotions.
Pay me $100k to work for them or spam me to decrease my mortgage payment while I increase my penis size; it's all the same, right? Why, Google, why?
Irony inside... (Score:1)
That must be the cheapest way to find out who are the best puzzle players in the world.
Luckly, my flag doesn't have red stripes.
Hope they have a new server this year. (Score:1)
HOWEVER, the entire thing was spoiled by a terrible server. They tell you to go to a site at precisely 11:00 am to get a password for a PDF, but guess what, the server isn't responding. I refresh and refresh until I give up and call the toll help line. They just say "gee, we're having some issues."
15 minutes later I get the page to load. That's 15 minutes less that I had to work on the test. I rationalized it, th
Re:Hope they have a new server this year. (Score:2)
And because so many of the top-ranked Canadians couldn't go, they had to drop down as far as #6 or #7 on the list, too. That time would have been vital in determining who went.
Some solutions (Score:1)
Solution to 1 [lmuscle.com]
Solution to 2 [lmuscle.com]
Solution to 3
Solution to 4 [lmuscle.com]
Solution to 5 [lmuscle.com]
Solution to 6 - any takers?
Re:Some solutions (Score:1)