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Will Shortz and Merl Reagle on The Simpsons

You read that right.  Will Shortz and Merl Reagle will be guest starring in a crossword themed episode of The Simpsons this weekend.  In addition, the New York Times Sunday Crossword Puzzle will be related to the show somehow.  Read more about it here.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Wednesday November 12, 2008 at 10:15 am)
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What’s in Will Shotz’s Wallet

The Wall Street Journal blog, The Wallet, has a little video that shows us what’s in the wallet of famous puzzlers Will Shortz and Maki Kaji.  Who knew that Will Shortz played table tennis?  Maki Kaji’s wallet is filled with bar receipts and horse racing tickets.  I kid you not.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Wednesday October 29, 2008 at 1:49 pm)
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Teen Puzzle Week at the New York Times

Here’s a quick news tidbit.  Next week, the New York Times will feature crossword puzzles constructed by students aged 15-19.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Friday September 5, 2008 at 5:42 pm)
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22 moves or less

It’s recently been determined that 22 moves or less are needed to solve any configuration of a Rubik’s Cube.  There is more information about this on mathpuzzle.com.  (That information comes from here.)

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Tuesday August 19, 2008 at 3:03 pm)
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24,000 piece jigsaw puzzle

Here’s a fun little story about a man who put together a 24,000 piece jigsaw puzzle.  According to the article, the puzzle took him 537 hours over 179 days to complete.  There’s a nice picture of the completed puzzle with the article.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Thursday July 31, 2008 at 3:44 pm)
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Crossword Art On The Underground

There’s an article in the Times Online about an art installation going in at the Stanmore Underground station in northwest London.  The installation is part of an Art On The Underground project that is sponsoring installations in a number of stations around London.  What’s interesting about the Stanmore station is that it focuses on crossword puzzles.

Serena Korda, the artist behind the installation, chose crossword puzzles as a theme because the Stanmore station is near where code breaking computer were housed during World War II.  Solving a Times crossword puzzle in less than 12 minutes was a requirement to join the codebreakers at Bletchley Park.  The installation was also inspired by information leaflets handed out in the underground during World War II.  These leaflets featured a crossword on the back.

Along with installation, there are a number of crossword puzzles themed around Stanmore.  The installation itself provides clues for the puzzles.  The installation is called The Answer Lies at the End of the Line.  And, apparently, this is also true for any who can’t solve the puzzles.

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Posted by Josh in In The News,Puzzle (Monday July 21, 2008 at 9:00 pm)
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Puzzle Solving Parrot

Here’s a fun news story about a puzzle solving parrot named “Ten.” The story has a video with it that is a bit more informative than the news blurb. The parrot faces off against zoo visitors in what is called a “chain puzzle” which the video reveals to be a simple tavern puzzle that many readers will recognize. In fact many of you will think, as I did, that you could certainly beat the parrot.

The reason why the parrot beats all of the visitors is that the parrot has already solved the puzzle. It simply has to do what it knows how to do to take the two pieces apart. The people facing off against it are actually trying to solve the puzzle. Still, it’s pretty amazing to watch the parrot complete the puzzle and I was particularly amused by the little boy who tried to watch what the parrot was doing and imitate it. There’s something delightfully ironic about that.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Wednesday March 26, 2008 at 2:28 pm)
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31st ACPT

The results are up for the 31st Annual American Crossword Puzzle Tournament.  Tyler Hinman wins again.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Sunday March 2, 2008 at 10:09 pm)
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31st Annual American Crossword Puzzle Tournament

Will Shortz has written a little blurb about the upcoming tournament for the New York Times.  It serves mostly as a reminder that the tournament is coming up and that it will be in Brooklyn this year.  It also mentions that there will be a screening of a film called “Wordploy,” a spoof of the 2006 documentary Wordplay.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Tuesday February 12, 2008 at 9:51 pm)
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Article on Puzzle Hunts

There’s a great article on the MIT Mystery Hunt in a local Cambridge Newspaper which is currently in progress.  The article does a good job of explaining what a puzzle hunt is for the uninitiated.  There’s a brief summary of the history of the MIT Mystery Hunt along with descriptions of a few of the puzzles.  We’re told that these puzzles, including one written in an archaic Minoan language, were too easy.  We also get a taste of the kinds of puzzles that have made it into recent hunts.  What’s interesting is that every year the winning team has to create the hunt the following year.  This leads to very different styles of puzzles showing up in the hunt.  The article points out the difference between puzzles that attempt to confuse you by providing too little information and those that attempt to confuse you by providing too much.  It’s a fun read.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Saturday January 19, 2008 at 4:49 pm)
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New Record for World’s Largest Crossword

There’s a story in the Yemen Observer about a Yemeni man who may have broken the record for the world’s largest crossword puzzle.  Abdul-Karim Qasem has created a crossword puzzle that has 320,500 squares and an 800,720 word clue book.  The puzzle took him seven years to complete and he needed to spend two days in bed after finishing it.

This story is an early favorite for strangest puzzle-related news article of the year.  (a category where there’s not much competition.)  Qasem claims that the previous record belonged to Tunisian man who had created a puzzle with 1800 squares.  This is not true.  The record setting puzzle that I know of has over 91,000 squares.  Still, Qasem’s puzzle shatters that record fairly handily.  Also, Qasem apparently used burn medication in his pens instead of ink when he was creating the puzzle.  I was unable to determine the reason from the article.

The new record has not yet been confirmed by Guiness.  Presumably when that happens, we’ll hear more about it from other international news sources.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Friday January 11, 2008 at 12:02 am)
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Color Sudoku

There was an article in Science Daily today about something called “color sudoku.”  Color sudoku is part of a research project at the University of Warwick regarding “Empriical Modeling.”  It’s not entirely clear to me what this is from the article, but the general idea is to look at the interactions between logic and perception.  This is where the color sudoku comes in.  In color sudoku, each digit is assigned a color and each square that has that digit in it is filled with that color.  The empty squares are filled with a combination of all of the colors for all of the possible digits that could go in that square.  This is intended to give you clues as to what should be there.  Darker colors, for example, will indicate more possibilities and, if the color in an empty square exactly matches that of a digit, you know which digit must go there.

While playing around with it, it was hard for me to see, at first, the advantage of the colors, but as more digits are filled in some patterns did begin to emerge.  Though I’m not sure if logic and perception ever actually met.  It’s an interesting idea and sudoku is a very accessible example, though likely not the best.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Tuesday December 18, 2007 at 10:31 pm)
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Thomas Snyder is the US Sudoku Champion

It’s funny how these things work…  This weekend, the World Sudoku Champion became the US Sudoku Champion.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Wednesday October 24, 2007 at 12:08 pm)
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Marriage Proposal in Boston Globe Crossword

There’s a cute story on Boston.com about Aric Egmont who proposed to his girlfriend Jennie Bass in a Boston Globe crossword puzzle.  For any who are interested in solving the puzzle you can find it here.  A word of warning though… the article above does reveal the answer for at least one of the clues.

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Posted by Josh in In The News,Puzzle (Monday September 24, 2007 at 11:18 am)
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San Jose Semaphore Solved

San Jose SemaphoreLast October, I posted about the San Jose Semaphore, a public art project that decorated the top of Adobe headquarters in San Jose that also happened to be a puzzle.  Little did I know that, at the time, the puzzle had already been solved.

It’s recently been revealed that the puzzle was solved by Bob Mayo and Mark Snesrud.  The answer: The semaphore cycles through the entire text of Thomas Pynchon’s The Crying of Lot 49.  It takes a few months for the semaphore to cycle through the whole thing.  There’s a great description of how the pair solved the puzzle in the San Jose Mercury News.

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Posted by Josh in In The News (Wednesday August 15, 2007 at 9:35 am)
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