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Inside the Lego Master Builder Search

blackdefiance writes "As most self-respecting geeks know, Lego is currently searching for a new Master Builder to hold the enviable position of building with Lego all day and getting paid for the privilege. One applicant describes the nerve-wracking experience of going through the first-round interview."

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  1. LEGO CAKE FOR LEGO BOI'S AND GIRLS by RecipeTroll · · Score: 5, Interesting

    LEGO CAKE

    Like a lot of kids, 9-year-old Katie Lemberg loves LEGOs.
    In honor of her favorite locking blocks, Lemberg and her mom developed an ingenious concept, the LEGO party.

    "It was great," Katie recalls. "None of the adults knew what it was--and all of the kids did."

    Materials
    1 13- x 9- x 2-inch sheet cake
    8 cupcakes
    White frosting
    Food coloring (your choice of color)
    Toothpicks

    Step 1:
    Turn the cake upside down and place the cupcakes on top as shown. Hold each cupcake in place with a toothpick.

    Step 2:
    Frost a bright color such as blue, red or yellow.

  2. get started now folks! by Guano_Jim · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The best way to get a job like this would be to get some experience building stuff.

    Legos are CHEAP on eBay available in bulk lots or even Complete mindstorms sets

    And if not for you, buy them for your kids. Beats letting them rot their brains out watching TV all day.

    Just watch out, stepping barefoot on a 2x2 lego in the middle of the night is worse than medieval caltrops.

  3. Where lego has been by Saven+Marek · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is, ok a bit off topic but the current mars lander has lego on board, with a photo of it here as part of an experiment

  4. Funny anecdote by Zathrus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I was in college taking my technical writing course (required, which I think is a good thing) the teacher gave us a in class project. She handed out a small baggie of lego, maybe 10 pieces each, and told us to make whatever we wanted in groups of 4. We then had to document what we made and how to reassemble it. Then take it apart, hand the baggie and instructions to another group, and see how they do.

    Nobody got anywhere close.

    The funny thing was that she had previously taught an English 1001 course. One of the first writing assignments she gave was to ask "What was your favorite childhood toy?"

    She'll never give that assignment again. Not at an engineering college. She got to read 30 essays extolling the virtues of Lego, how they inspired creativity and building, and how all the newer sets suck because they have overly specific pieces.

    I wasn't in that class, but I suspect my essay would've been similar. Lego just rocks. My first child is due in a month and we already have some of the newborn Lego stuff. My sister gave me a bag full of Duplo blocks (many of which came from me) since her kids have outgrown them, and I'll give them to my kid when she's capable of using them.

    Honestly... I'd much rather see a kid playing with blocks or lego than with most of the electronic toys nowadays. For one thing, they're far quieter... and they don't need batteries (although you can some sets with them nowadays -- which I only dreamed of when I was a kid).