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    Once upon a time... A Puzzle

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    • E Offline
      Ecuadorian
      last edited by

      1. I ask someone to stay outside the room and help me.

      2. I tie a string to one of the switches, then enter the room.

      3. I call the architect and tell him how bad his design is for having put the switches outside.

      4. I give up.

      -Miguel Lescano
      Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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      • jeff hammondJ Offline
        jeff hammond
        last edited by

        @ecuadorian said:

        1. I ask someone to stay outside the room and help me.

        2. I tie a string to one of the switches, then enter the room.

        3. I call the architect and tell him how bad his design is for having put the switches outside.

        4. I give up.

        haha #3 sounds good.
        1 & 2 are not allowed. (or anything like those)
        4 - nah - there's a real solution

        oh, and i should add.. if you fail, something terrible will happen.. let's say nuclear war 😄

        dotdotdot

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        • R Offline
          remus
          last edited by

          Is there a sneaky trick to it, or is there a combination of on/offs that you can set to work it out?

          http://remusrendering.wordpress.com/

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          • E Offline
            Ecuadorian
            last edited by

            Ok, I cheated and found the answer online. I can give a hint: The thing you can only do once is enter the room.

            And I'll give you a puzzle I've just made up. This one is for the Japanese speakers and Japanese language learners in the forum:
            3txq
            What is the next character in the sequence?

            -Miguel Lescano
            Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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            • jeff hammondJ Offline
              jeff hammond
              last edited by

              no Remus. Nothing sneaky.

              [edit] well, maybe.. there isn't a sole combination of on/off's that will tell you the answer.. there's something else to it but that something else is logic based.. not something you're going to be mad about when you realize the solution..

              and yeah, you can only enter the room once.. you can do whatever you want prior to going in.

              dotdotdot

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              • DanielD Offline
                Daniel
                last edited by

                @unknownuser said:

                Outside a room there are three light switches. Each switch is connected to a different light bulb inside the room.
                Each of the three switches can be either 'ON' or 'OFF'.
                You are allowed to set each switch the way you want it and then enter the room. you can only do this once.

                Your task is to then determine which switch controls which bulb. How can you do it?

                Flip the switch, then look in the room through the doorway (without entering it).

                My avatar is an anachronism.

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                • jeff hammondJ Offline
                  jeff hammond
                  last edited by

                  @daniel said:

                  @unknownuser said:

                  Outside a room there are three light switches. Each switch is connected to a different light bulb inside the room.
                  Each of the three switches can be either 'ON' or 'OFF'.
                  You are allowed to set each switch the way you want it and then enter the room. you can only do this once.

                  Your task is to then determine which switch controls which bulb. How can you do it?

                  Flip the switch, then look in the room through the doorway (without entering it).

                  nope - the room is light sealed.. no windows etc..

                  a hint - light bulbs are an important part of the solution.. if the switches were connected to electric fans for instance, you probably couldn't solve it..

                  dotdotdot

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                  • E Offline
                    Ecuadorian
                    last edited by

                    Yes I could, at least with most ceiling fans 😉

                    -Miguel Lescano
                    Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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                    • E Offline
                      Ecuadorian
                      last edited by

                      @unknownuser said:

                      Tomorrow does sheep will be at the same hour and at the same place on the way than today?

                      You never return to the same time and the same point in space 🤓

                      -Miguel Lescano
                      Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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                      • jeff hammondJ Offline
                        jeff hammond
                        last edited by

                        @ecuadorian said:

                        Yes I could, at least with most ceiling fans 😉

                        oh yeah.. i guess you could figure it out with fans..
                        i was going to use electric clocks as an example you couldn't do it with but that too would actually work.. an electric Digital clock (meaning - the display turns off instantaneously when the power is shut off) on the other hand - i don't think that would be possible.

                        dotdotdot

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                        • jeff hammondJ Offline
                          jeff hammond
                          last edited by

                          @unknownuser said:

                          an electric Digital clock (meaning - the display turns off instantaneously when the power is shut off) on the other hand - i don't think that would be possible.

                          ok, so i thought of a way you could do it with a digital clock as well..(and probably is the easiest of all)

                          i'll just go ahead and give the answer.. for ease of explanation, let's label the switches 1, 2, & 3:

                          • set switch 1 & 2 to the 'ON' position
                          • wait a minute or two
                          • turn off switch 2 and enter the room
                          • the light that is on is controlled by switch 1... the light that is off and warm is switch 2... the light that is off and cold is switch 3

                          and i'm stumped on frenchy's last question

                          dotdotdot

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                          • pilouP Offline
                            pilou
                            last edited by

                            @unknownuser said:

                            You never return to the same time and the same point in space

                            Read more the question 😉

                            Frenchy Pilou
                            Is beautiful that please without concept!
                            My Little site :)

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                            • T Offline
                              Teezer
                              last edited by

                              Once upon a time, I got into a session with a couple of programmers who were trying to find a non obvious way to hide information in a binary format. This is one of the things we came up with.

                              The following sequence is valid under this scheme:

                              1 = 1
                              2 = 110
                              3 = 111
                              4 = 100
                              5 = 101
                              6 = 11010
                              7 = 11011
                              8 = 11000
                              9 = 11001
                              10 = 11110

                              Can you see why?

                              Real life is just another website, albeit a rather boring one.

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                              • J Offline
                                Jim
                                last edited by

                                @unknownuser said:

                                Outside a room there are three light switches. Each switch is connected to a different light bulb inside the room.
                                Each of the three switches can be either 'ON' or 'OFF'.
                                You are allowed to set each switch the way you want it and then enter the room. you can only do this once.

                                Your task is to then determine which switch controls which bulb. How can you do it?

                                There's window in the wall and you can see the lights inside?

                                Hi

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                                • david_hD Offline
                                  david_h
                                  last edited by

                                  @unknownuser said:

                                  Each of the three switches can be either 'ON' or 'OFF'.
                                  You are allowed to set each switch the way you want it and then enter the room. you can only do this once.

                                  Your task is to then determine which switch controls which bulb. How can you do it?

                                  Model it in Podium. 💚

                                  If I make it look easy...It is probably easy

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                                  • E Offline
                                    Ecuadorian
                                    last edited by

                                    @teezer said:

                                    Once upon a time, I got into a session with a couple of programmers who were trying to find a non obvious way to hide information in a binary format. This is one of the things we came up with.

                                    The following sequence is valid under this scheme:

                                    1 = 1
                                    2 = 110
                                    3 = 111
                                    4 = 100
                                    5 = 101
                                    6 = 11010
                                    7 = 11011
                                    8 = 11000
                                    9 = 11001
                                    10 = 11110

                                    Can you see why?

                                    Ok, wait, I've solved the first 5 digits. It seems that you have to subtract and then add the relative values of the digits. I'm not a coder, so I might be way off... 😳

                                    2 = 4 - 2 + 0
                                    3 = 4 - 2 + 1
                                    4 = 4 - 0 + 0
                                    5 = 4 - 0 + 1

                                    -Miguel Lescano
                                    Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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                                    • E Offline
                                      Ecuadorian
                                      last edited by

                                      That's why I came up with my own puzzle, Pilou. Anyone wants to give it a try?

                                      @ecuadorian said:

                                      This one is for the Japanese speakers and Japanese language learners in the forum:
                                      3txq
                                      What is the next character in the sequence?

                                      -Miguel Lescano
                                      Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • pilouP Offline
                                        pilou
                                        last edited by

                                        In Cheating 💚
                                        In fact now with Internet it's very difficult to find new problem 😒
                                        Solution is always somewhere 😉

                                        @unknownuser said:

                                        From: Doctor Rob
                                        Subject: Negative bases

                                        Yes, there are negative bases. They aren't used much, but they are
                                        quite interesting. They allow you to represent both positive and
                                        negative numbers with only positive digits. For example, if the base
                                        is -2, then you have the following equalities:
                                        Base 10... Base -2
                                        -11..... 110101
                                        -10..... 1010
                                        -9..... 1011
                                        -8..... 1000
                                        -7..... 1001
                                        -6..... 1110
                                        -5..... 1111
                                        -4 ..... 1100
                                        -3 ..... 1101
                                        -2 ..... 10
                                        -1..... 11
                                        0..... 0
                                        1 ..... 1
                                        2 ..... 110
                                        3 .... 111
                                        4 ... 100
                                        5 ... 101
                                        6 ... 11010
                                        7 ... 11011
                                        8 ... 11000
                                        9 ... 11001
                                        10 ... 11110

                                        Frenchy Pilou
                                        Is beautiful that please without concept!
                                        My Little site :)

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                                        • T Offline
                                          Teezer
                                          last edited by

                                          @ecuadorian said:

                                          That's why I came up with my own puzzle, Pilou. Anyone wants to give it a try?

                                          @ecuadorian said:

                                          This one is for the Japanese speakers and Japanese language learners in the forum:
                                          3txq
                                          What is the next character in the sequence?

                                          I know nothing about Japanese, but congratulations to you and Pilou for seeing that the sequence was base minus two. Most folks have never heard of negative base numbers. 😄

                                          Real life is just another website, albeit a rather boring one.

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                                          • E Offline
                                            Ecuadorian
                                            last edited by

                                            I had not heard about negative bases either, Tweezer. I just noticed that there was something rhythmic in the alternate subtract-add-subtract-add thing.

                                            Since there seems to be no Japanese language students here, I'll post a (hopefully) less known puzzle:

                                            One morning, Mr. Rich, the richest (and stingiest) man alive, entered a bank in downtown Manhattan. He went directly to the account officer and asked him for a $1 loan. The officer said:

                                            -But Mr. Rich, you have gazillions in our bank. You can withdraw any amount you want.

                                            -No, I want a loan, son. If you don't give it to me, I'll withdraw all my money from this bank and never return!

                                            -Ok, I'll give it to you. You have to sign this paper here, and here.

                                            -Aren't you going to ask me to pawn something?

                                            -Of course not! We've known you for decades, Mr. Rich, we trust you with our lives.

                                            -If you don't allow me to pawn something, son, I'll withdraw all my deposits and all my investments from this bloody bank!

                                            -Fine. What do you want to pawn?

                                            -Perhaps my car. It's right out here.

                                            -Understood. I'll tell the guards to put it inside immediately.

                                            -How much is the interest rate, son?

                                            -It's just a 3% monthly interest rate, Mr. Rich.

                                            -So, if I return this dollar before one month, I have to pay an interest of 3 cents?

                                            -Exactly, Mr. Rich.

                                            -Thank you, son.

                                            And then Mr. Rich left the bank. Now, the question is, why did Mr. Rich do that?

                                            -Miguel Lescano
                                            Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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