From wft@math.canterbury.ac.nz Wed Apr 15 01:19:50 1992 Return-Path: Received: from CANTVA.CANTERBURY.AC.NZ by life.ai.mit.edu (4.1/AI-4.10) id AA22905; Wed, 15 Apr 92 01:19:50 EDT Received: from math.canterbury.ac.nz by csc.canterbury.ac.nz (PMDF #12052) id <01GIVU9X7N1CD7PYTP@csc.canterbury.ac.nz>; Wed, 15 Apr 1992 17:19 +1200 Received: by math.canterbury.ac.nz (4.1/SMI-4.1) id AA13903; Wed, 15 Apr 92 17:19:18 NZS Date: Wed, 15 Apr 92 17:19:18 NZS From: wft@math.canterbury.ac.nz (Bill Taylor) Subject: God's algorithm To: Cube-Lovers@ai.mit.edu Message-Id: <9204150519.AA13903@math.canterbury.ac.nz> X-Envelope-To: Cube-Lovers@AI.MIT.EDU In rec.puzzles, sijben@cs.utwente.nl (Paul Sijben) writes: > As far a I know is the maximum number of moves requierd to solve The > Cube is just over 30 (35 by the last count a year ago, and decending). > Someone in the NKC (Nederlandse Kubus Club= dutch cube club) was busy > working on a system hoping to reach god's algorythm. I can dig in my > archives if anyone want more precice infomation. Has anyone else heard anything of this business ?