From cube-lovers-errors@curry.epilogue.com Tue May 28 18:56:50 1996 Return-Path: cube-lovers-errors@curry.epilogue.com Received: from curry.epilogue.com (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by curry.epilogue.com (8.6.12/8.6.12) with SMTP id SAA00500 for ; Tue, 28 May 1996 18:56:50 -0400 Precedence: bulk Errors-To: cube-lovers-errors@curry.epilogue.com Date: Tue, 28 May 1996 13:18:51 -0700 From: "Jason K. Werner" Message-Id: <9605281318.ZM12960@neuhelp.corp.sgi.com> In-Reply-To: "Michael C. Masonjones" "Square 1 Combinations" (May 28, 10:11) References: <9605281411.AA29962@sarofim-sun.MIT.EDU> X-Face: 6]L85m[]|?5>dL9qI]8j>PPk/:]fF4Ma`5O&VJU)U.6"lo:gX{D`?bNqWl~),bS~`rrB5+P d=NQ_[sXE*#|;SZ)PanGF^&Q-Ch[[|Q)Pgx%ts.JdPJ,3bwU84qc^s2q"sH{l9+g]$cD&a"?S]PQ)F b~4}Y93=ZOimDi_J^(lR;OLeN^W\]/&!v8S=~8Qw'HJ.ksu:R/!iV:WiExaWEXw!v$&hyp[mC X-Mailer: Z-Mail-SGI (3.2S.2 10apr95 MediaMail) To: cube-lovers@ai.mit.edu, "Michael C. Masonjones" Subject: Re: Square 1 Combinations Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii On May 28, 10:11, Michael C. Masonjones wrote: > Subject: Square 1 Combinations ..... > On another note, when I signed up, I mentioned to Alan that I must be > crazy enough to join this group since I have a five foot mockup of a > rubik's type puzzle as my coffee table. He thought its description > might be of general interest. Skip the rest of this paragraph if you > couldn't care less about its origins. I built it for Caltech's ditch day event > Maybe you have heard of it. That's where all the seniors leave for the > day with their room locked only with a puzzle of some sort, and the > object is for the undergraduates to get into the room by solving it > (with a couple of clues, of course). Anyway, being as it was that I > had a mechanical engineer roommate... The rest is history, and I now > have a five foot diameter puzzle coffee table. ..... Speaking of oversized Rubik puzzles... A good friend of mine built an oversized, fully functional Rubik's Magic about 3 years ago. She painted all of the artwork that went inbetween the plastic squares, cut out all the grooves, and used a heavy duty grade of fishing wire to connect all the pieces. We kind of thrashed my Rubik's Magic to see how many wires were used in the Magic and all the paths they took. I _think_ each square was 1'X1', so that would have made the puzzle 2'X4'. It's fun to play with, but only if you have the stamina; it's heavy! :) -Jason -- Jason K. Werner, Silicon Graphics U.S. Field Operations I/S Sys Admin mrhip@corp.sgi.com, 415-933-6397 "I will choose free will".....Neil Peart "These go to eleven".....Nigel Tufnel *********************** THIS IS A FREE SPEECH ZONE ************************ In defiance of the Communications Decency Act, I refuse to self-censor the content of my e-mail, my online postings, and my Web pages. I urge other Constitutionally-protected Americans to declare their online communications FREE SPEECH ZONES and to fight any attempts at regulating, censoring and "dumbing down" the Internet. The Net is not TV and radio! Let's keep it that way. http://www.eff.org/blueribbon.html mrhip@corp.sgi.com **************** I SUPPORT THE EFF'S BLUE RIBBON CAMPAIGN *****************