Monday, July 27, 2009
Puzzle Auction
http://puzzles.baxterweb.com Closes July 29 You will never find these types of puzzles on Ebay.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Alien Tiles

We are always skeptical of the claim "hardest puzzle in the world". Nevertheless, this reporter always investigates. Clifford Pickover and Cam Mckechnie have come up with this colorful puzzle Alien Tiles. I solved the First Goal in about 5 minutes using 147 moves. It may not be the least number of moves. The Second Goal is harder. In trying to solve it, I got some interesting patterns - similar to goals 3 & 4. Definitely worth playing!
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Rubik's TouchCube on QVC
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
NY Times Crossword Puzzle Editor Interview
We are hoping that this is a trend: puzzlers will be as celebrated in our society as pop stars. I've met Will Shortz several times at mechanical puzzle parties (including the New York Puzzle party which I host). He's a bona fide puzzle expert & a good guy!
Houston, we have some problems
The New York Times has presented some nice puzzles today to commerorate the landing on the moon.
www.nytimes.com/2009/07/19/opinion/19spacepuzzle.html?_r=1&ref=opinion
www.nytimes.com/2009/07/19/opinion/19spacepuzzle.html?_r=1&ref=opinion
(FYI: my dad woke me from a nap to make sure I saw it.)
Sunday, June 14, 2009
Book Review The Cube: The Ultimate Guide to the World's Bestselling Puzzle

Authors: Jerry Solcum, David Singmaster, Wei-Hwa Huang, Dieter Gebhardt, Geert Hellings
In 1974 Hungarian Erno Rubik invented what would become the world’s biggest puzzle seller in history. It took him 6 years to market the puzzle. By mid 1981 – the craze became a worldwide phenomenon. Go to the 4 corners of the world today – almost everybody has played with it. 35 years later, Rubik’s Cube not only keeps on selling, it’s enjoyed a new burst of enthusiasm – thanks to the internet.
Back in the 80’s many books were written on how to solve the cube. Since then…not much. At long last Jerry Slocum and his puzzle scholar friends have written a definitive edition that is just plain fun! Jerry Slocum offers an historical contribution which covers the prior puzzle crazes, namely, The Tangram (1817), The 15 Puzzle (1880), and Pigs in Clover (1889). (For a more thorough history of the 15 Puzzle, look for Jerry Slocum & Dic Sonneveld’s The 15 Puzzle book – published in 2006.)
David Singmaster, a contributing author, covers the history of the cube. Here we learn about Larry Nichols, a Harvard grad student who invented a 2x2x2 cube with magnets in 1959. With his patent, he sued CBS (which previously bought the Ideal Toy company, which licensed the Rubik’s Cube) for $60,000,000. The star witness was none other than Jerry Slocum! Nichols won the case but lost on appeal.
Mr. Singmaster, a mathematician, helped fuel the cube craze with his own solving notes which he published. He also started the speed solving competitions. One distinct memory: My wife recognized the cube as an enemy as soon as I showed it to her.

Geert Hellings writes about variations of the cube. This is where things get exciting. The obvious variations 2x2, 4x4 & 5x5 were quickly invented and produced. Rubik holds the patent for the 2x2, while Peter Sebesteny and Udo Krell own the patents for the others, respectively. It was considered impossible to construct a 6x6 cube. Fortunately Panagiotis Verdes was not aware of that. He recently invented and produced the 6x6 and 7x7 cubes. He has designs for cubes up to 11x11.
Mr Hellings then takes us into the world of Twistypuzzles.com where aficionados have decided that the world needs more polyhedral rotational sequential movement puzzles. The shapes, colors and complexity are dazzling, inspiring and are cumulatively a celebration of human ingenuity. Some of these puzzles have been mass produced – the Pyraminx sold over 90,000,000. The Megaminx sold less, but is still available at mefferts.com.
Other inventors have produced strange hybrid puzzles in very small quantities that often sell for thousands of dollars. Tony Fisher’s Overlapping Cube is a combination 3x3, 4x4 & 5x5. Anthony Greenhill’s Dodecahedron combines elements form Square-One, which is one of the hardest puzzles. Then there’s Andrew Cormier who made the Teraminx with 542 outer pieces.
The final chapter consists of very clear instructions for solving all ‘normal’ cubes from 3x3 through 7x7.

To the authors, we say Bravo!
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