April fool... in November
Nov. 28th, 2006 09:11 amThat evening I fiddled about trying, without success, to re-assemble it.
Much later I had another shot at it using the "cheat-sheet". This time I was able to assemble it up to the final part which, it seems to me, is logically impossible to insert. Weird. Also, it bothered me that my memory of the original, assembled puzzle doesn't look like the cheat-sheet version. Even worse, there were 2 parts left over. Counting the blocks in the "solution" yields 12 blocks. But the puzzle contains 14 blocks!
I have this image of some guy in a Chinese toy factory hatching this plot to drive westerners nuts by selling them a puzzle for which the cheat-sheet solution is impossible.
I've included a quick sketch I did of one of the blocks. All 14 blocks are identical. Anybody have any ideas?
no subject
Date: 2006-11-27 11:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-27 11:29 pm (UTC)When I want to re-arrange furniture I tend to build a quick VR model and fiddle with that first. But that actually makes good sense, because moving furniture around is difficult enough that it is best not to experiment with the real thing -- move it only to the final position.
no subject
Date: 2006-11-28 05:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-28 02:30 pm (UTC)Only if you assume continuous - as opposed to discrete - calculus. The assumptions are that you may cut the sphere up into infinitesimally small pieces, and taken to the absurd, the original sphere may be reproduced /ad infinitum/.
It's one of my favorite ways of demonstrating why one should question and corroborate one's results and what may be broken with the current model of Physics.
no subject
Date: 2006-11-29 12:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-29 08:14 pm (UTC)