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| | photo results | What's THis????? | Can you tell what's there in the picture????? | |
|  mayankbargali (49) |
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 | Question and Answers | puzzled with so many questions and answers | |
|  venkygec (570) |
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 | Grid Puzzle - Nonogram | Nonograms are picture logic puzzles in which cells in a grid have to be colored or left blank according to numbers given at the side of the grid to reveal a hidden picture. In this puzzle type, the numbers measure how many unbroken lines of filled-in squares there are in any given row or column. For example, a clue of"4 8 3" would mean there are sets of four, eight, and three filled squares, in that order, with at least one blank square between successive groups.
These puzzles are often black and white but can also have some colors. If they are colored, the number clues will also be colored in order to indicate the color of the squares. Two differently colored numbers may or may not have a space in between them. For example, a black four followed by a red two could mean four black spaces, some empty spaces, and two red spaces, or it could simply mean four black spaces followed immediately by two red ones.
Although there are no theoretical limits on the size of a nonogram, most do not exceed 100x100. The largest known nonogram has a size 500x500, unfortunately it was solved only by the computer. It was introduced on International Griddlers Meeting, 2nd-4th September 2005, Delft Netherlands. | |
|  ratyz5 (1780) |
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 | my favorite puzzle | this is my favorite puzzle. In the picture are nine points. You must connect all the nine dots with only four lines. Let's see how you fare! | |
|  richiem (875) |
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 | answer to the puzzle | You may touch all the dots with this four line. The moral of the puzzle here is: Think outside the box. | |
|  richiem (875) |
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 | It's your shadow! | You can see it,but you can't touch it.It may disapper,but has never really left you.It grows throught the day.What is it? | |
|  moolahmagnet (1617) |
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 | Rubik's Cube | Rubik’s cube/"ru;bIks/
· n. trademark a puzzle in the form of a plastic cube covered with multicoloured squares, which the player attempts to turn so that all the squares on each face are of the same colour.
– ORIGIN 1980s: named after its Hungarian inventor Erno Rubik. - Concise Oxford Dictionary - Tenth Edition
Rubik's cube is a toy puzzle designed by Erno Rubik during the mid-1970s. It is a cube-shaped device made up of smaller cube pieces with six faces having differing colors. The primary method of manufacture involves injection molding of the various component pieces, then subsequent assembly, labeling, and packaging. The cube was extremely popular during the 1980s, and at its peak between 1980 and 1983, 200 million cubes were sold world wide. Today sales continue to be over 500,000 cubes sold world wide each year.
The Rubik's cube appears to be made up of 26 smaller cubes. In its solved state, it has six faces, each made up of nine small square faces of the same color. While it appears that all of the small faces can be moved, only the corners and edges can actually move. The center cubes are each fixed and only rotate in place. When the cube is taken apart it can be seen that the center cubes are each connected by axles to an inner core. The corners and edges are not fixed to anything. This allows them to move around the center cubes. The cube maintains its shape because the corners and edges hold each other in place and are retained by the center cubes. Each piece has an internal tab that is retained by the center cubes and trapped by the surrounding pieces. These tabs are shaped to fit along a curved track that is created by the backs of the other pieces. The central cubes are fixed with a spring and rivet and retain all the surrounding pieces. The spring exerts just the right pressure to hold all the pieces in place while giving enough flexibility for a smooth and forgiving function. - answers.com | |
|  ratyz5 (1780) |
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 | signals | do we undestand this life signals? | |
|  tubeth2000 (558) |
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 | wolf,goat and cabbage | man-wolf-goat-cabbage problem | |
|  antony2best (257) |
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