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Google-Sponsored 2004 US Puzzle Championship

kublai kahn writes "On the NPR Weekend Edition Sunday puzzle segment this past weekend, Will Shortz mentioned the 2004 US Puzzle Championship, sponsored by Google. Registration closes on Thursday 17 June, and the competition is conducted online on Saturday 19 June. "The top two US contestants will be selected to join the US Team at the World Puzzle Championship in Opatija, Croatia. Prizes will be awards to the top US contestants." (This was mentioned on Slashdot last year as well.) I'll be away from my internet connection over the weekend, but perhaps others from the Slashdot crowd can compete. Check the practice test to see if it's your cup of tea."

11 of 115 comments (clear)

  1. Hmmm by Grrr · · Score: 5, Funny

    You'll be away from your internet connection?
    Away...
    uh...

    I just don't get it.

    <grrr>

  2. /. effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The first puzzle would be how to avoid getting slashdotted.

    1. Re:/. effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      The first puzzle would be how to avoid getting slashdotted.
      That one is easy: First put the PDF download URL on a rotating link. Then for each visitor check to see if the referrer is slashdot.org, if not offer the download URL, if so then redirect these users to a random URL within the slashdot archives. In the time it takes someone to not be an asshole and post a mirror you will have made it over the hump and in the process burned a bit of the slashdot site bandwidth in return for the "favor" they granted you...

      I am really surprised that this is not offered as a standard option on Apache.

  3. Make sure you read the instructions! by riptide_dot · · Score: 5, Funny

    For the real test, you should print and read the Preview Instructions well in advance of the actual test. The Preview Instructions may include special last-minute instructions that will not appear elsewhere.

    ...get...instructions...well...in...advance...but. ..must...get...last...minute...instructions...

    Okay I'm out. My brain already hurts...

    --
    I was in the park the other day wondering why frisbees get bigger and bigger the closer they get - and then it hit me.
  4. Sounds fun . . . by randyest · · Score: 5, Informative

    . . . but the practice test page is down (./'ed already?) so here's a copy courtesy of the wayback machine (the last link is an index to several versions of that practice page.)

    Good luck all.

    --
    everything in moderation
  5. An excerpt. by sammy+baby · · Score: 5, Funny
    An excerpt from the practice test:
    1. If 200,000 Slashdot geeks click a link to a website in a span of five minutes, to request a 1 meg PDF file from over your crappy T1, what will the average ratio of geek to T1 channels be over a minute? Assume a standard 24 channels per T1, and that the Slashdot audience will rabidly click and re-click the link until a successful connection is made.
  6. Hope springs eternal... by MindNumbingOblivion · · Score: 5, Funny

    And when I discovered they weren't talking about tetris, the white dove of hope came crashing back to earth in a fiery ball of feathers.

    At least I get some roasted avian out of the deal...

    --
    #define CLUE 0
  7. If you ever... by msl521 · · Score: 5, Informative

    > this past weekend, Will Shortz mentioned

    If you ever have the chance to hear Will Shortz speak in person, it is well worth it. If you have an interest in word puzzles, cross or otherwise, he is very interesting. Plus, he will usually play a game with the audience for a good amount of time.

    --
    The opinions expressed above are those off one side of my brain, the other side and my employer may not agree.
  8. Questions... by Mz6 · · Score: 5, Informative
    I managed to get a copy of the PDF file.. I have no way to mirror it and Google's cache isn't working of it so here's what I could grab. Anyways.. if you want to see the questions (minus pictures..)

    1. Battleships - 5 points; 5 point bonus
    Locate the position of the 10-ship fleet in the grid. The fleet is shown to the right of the grid: one 4-unit battleship, two 3-unit cruisers, three 2-unit destroyers, and four 1-unit submarines. Each segment of a ship occupies a single cell. Ships are oriented either horizontally or vertically, and they do not touch each other, not even diagonally. The numbers on the right and bottom edges of the grid reveal the total number of ship segments that appear in each respective row or column. (For solving purposes, ignore the letters above and the numbers left of the grid.)

    2. Pentomino Division - 5 points
    Divide each of the six shapes into two pieces so that each of the 12 Pentominoes (shown at right) is used exactly once. The Pentominoes can be rotated and/or reflected. Answer: Enter the letters pairs corresponding to each of the six original shapes.

    3. Dutch Segway - 5 points
    Which of the numbered drawings is an exact mirror image of the drawing in the upper left?

    4. Corral - 20 points; 5 point bonus
    Draw a single closed loop along the grid lines so that all the numbered squares are inside the loop. Additionally, each number equals the count of interior squares that are directly in line (horizontally or vertically) with that number's square, including the square itself. In the example, the square containing the 4 is directly in line with two squares above it and one square to its right. Including the square itself, the total count is four.

    5. Rotator Mosaic - 20 points
    Divide the grid (along the grid lines) into exactly 10 symmetric pieces (each appearing unchanged if rotated 180, including its shape and the pattern of any white or black disks).

    6. A to Z Crisscross - 25 points; 5 point bonus
    Place the 19 words into the grid in crisscross style (words appear either across or down, and all words formed in the grid appear in the word list), so that there are exactly 26 word intersections--each in one of the highlighted squares. Additionally, each of the letters from A to Z appears exactly once in the highlighted squares.

    --
    Hmmm.
  9. Re:Think realistically here by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 5, Funny

    Its a trick question. Just because /.ers click the link does not mean that they actually read the page. They just have to look at the page long enough to determine whether it requires them to be aggressively favorable or bitterly critical of it.

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  10. Compete Against Wei-Hwa? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wonder if the US's best puzzler, Wei-Hwa Huang, will compete in the online tournament. He won the world championships a couple of years ago and finished second last year. I went to college with this guys and he was a dweeb even by Techer standards. All freshmen go to an orientation camp on Catalina Island and every year's there's a "talent show." Wei-Hwa entered the talent show and showed how he could solve a Rubik's Cube after only glancing at it once. He would quickly look at the cube, then walk around the room trying to be funny while he solved it without looking at it again. Each joke was followed by what can only be described as a very uncomfortable silence... I think Wei-Hwa works for Google now, an interesting coincidence?