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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2012 10:23 pm Post subject: 1801 |
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| jadesmar wrote: |
| Do these footballers have football player numbers that may be useful? |
You sound like a real fan
I doubt it, players can change numbers throughout their careers. Rick Mirer wore both 3 and 13. Some of these players, like Mirer, were journeymen, they played for lots of teams, so I doubt teams come into play, either.
Here's the definitive site for football stuff:
http://www.pro-football-reference.com _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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gftt
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2012 10:49 pm Post subject: 1802 |
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When I log in and try to post something, I usually have to log in twice. Anyone else having this problem?
Rick Mirer, pick 2 in '93 -> Jack London (The Road)
Dick Bielski, pick 9 in '55 -> Mark Twain (The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County)
John David Crow, pick 2 in '58 -> Joseph Conrad (Heart of Darkness)
Simeon Rice, pick 3 in '96 -> A A Milne (Winnie the Pooh)
Dewayne Robertson, pick 4 in '03 -> Robert Frost (The Road Not Taken)
Billy Sims, pick 1 in '80 -> Martin Luther (?)
Bert Jones, pick 2 in '73 -> Karl Marx (The Communist Manifesto)
Jim Houston, pick 8 in '60 -> William Butler Yeats (The Second Coming)
Michael Clayton, pick 15 in '04 -> F Scott Fitzgerald (Tender is the Night)
Bob Whitfield, pick 8 in '92 -> Alexander Pope (The Dunciad)
Jim Everett, pick 3 in '86 -> Charles Darwin (The Origin of Species)
Russell Okung, pick 6 in '10 -> Franz Kafka (The Trial)
Marshall Faulk, pick 2 in '94 -> Eugene O'Neill (The Iceman cometh)
Kelly Stouffer, pick 6 in '87 -> William Shakespeare (As You Like It)
If you use the picks to index into full names you get "anomemableakua" which seems strangely coherent, even though it's not. Indexing into titles doesn't seem to get anything. It does seem, though, that thinking about draft order is good, since it would be a strange coincidence that all of these players were high round 1 picks. |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2012 11:07 pm Post subject: 1803 |
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| gftt wrote: |
| When I log in and try to post something, I usually have to log in twice. Anyone else having this problem? |
Yep...every time for as long as I can remember. _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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jadesmar
Bad Puppy
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Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2012 11:15 pm Post subject: 1804 |
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| gftt wrote: |
When I log in and try to post something, I usually have to log in twice. Anyone else having this problem?
If you use the picks to index into full names you get "anomemableakua" which seems strangely coherent, even though it's not. Indexing into titles doesn't seem to get anything. It does seem, though, that thinking about draft order is good, since it would be a strange coincidence that all of these players were high round 1 picks. |
When you use the full name of A A Milne, what are you using?
Also, people like Mark Twain, Jack London and maybe Conrad have alternate names. |
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gftt
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Thu Nov 29, 2012 11:45 pm Post subject: 1805 |
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| jadesmar wrote: |
When you use the full name of A A Milne, what are you using?
Also, people like Mark Twain, Jack London and maybe Conrad have alternate names. |
A A Milne. That's the name everyone knows him by.
If you want to experiment with birth names go right ahead. |
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Scurra
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 12:36 am Post subject: 1806 |
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| Suspence wrote: |
| Just looked up the football players, I was only familiar with about half of them. |
When I did this one I was familiar with exactly zero of them. But I enjoyed the quote hunting stage. _________________
still Quiz Olympiad champion. Must get a life.
New definitions: COFFEE - someone who is coughed upon
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gftt*
Guest
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 1:24 pm Post subject: 1807 |
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| One notes that all of the players were drafted in different years. Do we have to reorder by draft year? That would raise the question of how the players were originally ordered, however... |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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gftt*
Guest
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 3:50 pm Post subject: 1809 |
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Let us know if you find an NFL player named Franz Kafka.  |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 4:10 pm Post subject: 1810 |
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There is a Mike Kafka. He's a quarterback, I think he plays for the Eagles.
Hmm...
Russell Okung, pick 6 in '10 -> Franz Kafka (The Trial)
Mike Kafka - drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in the 4th round (122nd overall) of the 2010 NFL Draft.
Kelly Stouffer, pick 6 in '87 -> William Shakespeare (As You Like It)
Stanley Shakespeare played one season in the NFL, 1987, but was undrafted. _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 4:17 pm Post subject: 1811 |
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Rick Mirer, pick 2 in '93 -> Jack London (The Road)
93 Draft, pick 62 was Antonio London
Dick Bielski, pick 9 in '55 -> Mark Twain (The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County)
95 Draft, no Twains, but pick 77 was Bob Clemens.
John David Crow, pick 2 in '58 -> Joseph Conrad (Heart of Darkness)
58 Draft, pick 58, Bobby Joe Conrad
Simeon Rice, pick 3 in '96 -> A A Milne (Winnie the Pooh)
96 Draft, pick 115, Brian Milne
Dewayne Robertson, pick 4 in '03 -> Robert Frost (The Road Not Taken)
03 Draft, no Frost's drafted, but Derrick Frost went undrafted/
Billy Sims, pick 1 in '80 -> Martin Luther (?)
80 Draft, pick 101, Ed Luther
Bert Jones, pick 2 in '73 -> Karl Marx (The Communist Manifesto)
73 Draft, pick 39, Greg Marx
Jim Houston, pick 8 in '60 -> William Butler Yeats (The Second Coming)
60 Draft, no Yeats drafted, but James Yeats went undrafted.
Michael Clayton, pick 15 in '04 -> F Scott Fitzgerald (Tender is the Night)
04 Draft, pick 3, Larry Fitzgerald
Bob Whitfield, pick 8 in '92 -> Alexander Pope (The Dunciad)
92 Draft, pick 33, Marquez Pope
Jim Everett, pick 3 in '86 -> Charles Darwin (The Origin of Species)
86 Draft, pick 106, Matt Darwin
Russell Okung, pick 6 in '10 -> Franz Kafka (The Trial)
10 Draft, pick 122, Mike Kafka
Marshall Faulk, pick 2 in '94 -> Eugene O'Neill (The Iceman cometh)
94 Draft, pick 135, Pat O'Neill
Kelly Stouffer, pick 6 in '87 -> William Shakespeare (As You Like It)
87 Draft, no Shakespeare drafted, but Stanley Shakespeare went undrafted. _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature.
Last edited by Suspence on Fri Nov 30, 2012 4:32 pm; edited 3 times in total |
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novice
No harm. Pun intended!
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 4:25 pm Post subject: 1812 |
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Derrick Frost, undrafted in 2003.
Ed Luther, 101st pick in 1980 |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 4:29 pm Post subject: 1813 |
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And James Yeats, undrafted in 1960.
That completes the list. I've edited these back into my post above. I tried using the pick number of the high draft pick as an extraction method on the name of the new player, but that didn't seem to work. _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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novice
No harm. Pun intended!
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 4:41 pm Post subject: 1814 |
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| The list is sorted by the misquoted player's name. |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 4:45 pm Post subject: 1815 |
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The same extraction doesn't yield anything when sorted by draft year. _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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SuperSlug
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 5:52 pm Post subject: 1816 |
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| Code: |
N Dick Bielski, pick 9 in '55 -> Mark Twain (The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County)
55 Draft, no Twains, but pick 77 was Bob Clemens.
O John David Crow, pick 2 in '58 -> Joseph Conrad (Heart of Darkness)
58 Draft, pick 58, Bobby Joe Conrad
A? Jim Houston, pick 8 in '60 -> William Butler Yeats (The Second Coming)
60 Draft, no Yeats drafted, but James Yeats went undrafted.
R Bert Jones, pick 2 in '73 -> Karl Marx (The Communist Manifesto)
73 Draft, pick 39, Greg Marx
E Billy Sims, pick 1 in '80 -> Martin Luther (?)
80 Draft, pick 101, Ed Luther
T Jim Everett, pick 3 in '86 -> Charles Darwin (The Origin of Species)
86 Draft, pick 106, Matt Darwin
E Kelly Stouffer, pick 6 in '87 -> William Shakespeare (As You Like It)
87 Draft, no Shakespeare drafted, but Stanley Shakespeare went undrafted.
P Bob Whitfield, pick 8 in '92 -> Alexander Pope (The Dunciad)
92 Draft, pick 33, Marquez Pope
N Rick Mirer, pick 2 in '93 -> Jack London (The Road)
93 Draft, pick 62 was Antonio London
A Marshall Faulk, pick 2 in '94 -> Eugene O'Neill (The Iceman cometh)
94 Draft, pick 135, Pat O'Neill
I Simeon Rice, pick 3 in '96 -> A A Milne (Winnie the Pooh)
96 Draft, pick 115, Brian Milne
R Dewayne Robertson, pick 4 in '03 -> Robert Frost (The Road Not Taken)
03 Draft, no Frost's drafted, but Derrick Frost went undrafted/
D Michael Clayton, pick 15 in '04 -> F Scott Fitzgerald (Tender is the Night)
04 Draft, pick 3, Larry Fitzgerald
A Russell Okung, pick 6 in '10 -> Franz Kafka (The Trial)
10 Draft, pick 122, Mike Kafka |
Order by draft year
Use 1st round draft pick number to index into second player's name
Read up the column
ADRIANPETERAON (mistake in the puzzle? need the 5th drafted player (Tom Moore) not the 8th to pull the required S)
ADRIAN PETERSON
| Code: |
For the Meta:
7. This man was born to run.
ADRIAN PETERSON = 85
TERRY GENE BOLLEA = 53
JOHN ADAMS = 35
JERRY WEXLER = 17
"Born" hints at birth years. These are all the birth years for each person
Adrian Lewis Peterson (born March 21, 1985) |
Call in ADRIAN PETERSON |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:19 pm Post subject: 1817 |
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Just the meta remains. Here is the completed information, and the flavortext:
Fresh off their triumph on Jeopardy!, the team at IBM realized it was time to implement their long-secret primary goal for Watson: reviewing Broadway plays. With a little new code, Watson 2.0 could now identify the perfect recipe for a smash hit. However, the programmers knew that if Watson’s hidden algorithms were discovered, they would be humiliated and Watson would be dismantled for good…
1. This best-selling book flew off the rack. (Scrabble values)
HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX = 65
VELVET ELVIS = 20
VALLEY = 12
TERMINAL = 10
2. This word might appear in a letter to a valued friend. (Sum of letter values)
ESTEEMED = 76
EBOOK = 48
ADOBO = 37
RACED = 31
3. This food often fails to meet international standards. (Convert LSB from Hex to Dec)
HAMBURGER = 84
MERCURY = 63
COLON = 58
UNION = 42
4. This is part of a lengthy and miserable experience. (Letter count times 5)
I DREAMED A DREAM = 70
CLINTON = 35
CHERRY = 30
DEPOT =25
5. Even the ancient Romans may have had to pay this burden. (Sum of Roman numerals)
LUXURY TAX = 70
BUSINESS TRAVELERS = 56
SOUTHWEST AIRLINES = 52
OKAPI =1
6. You might use the phrase “robbed blind” while talking about this. (Braille dots)
BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID = 79
FORGET PARIS = 34
BATED BREATH = 28
YOKEL =15
7. This man was born to run. (Birth year)
ADRIAN PETERSON = 85
TERRY GENE BOLLEA = 53
JOHN ADAMS = 35
JERRY WEXLER = 17
8. Even a two-bit company must follow these rules. (Binary using I's and O's)
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION = 82
CAPITOL HILL = 5
FIRESTONE = 2
SLITS = 1 _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature.
Last edited by Suspence on Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:50 pm; edited 4 times in total |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:23 pm Post subject: 1818 |
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| SuperSlug wrote: |
| ADRIANPETERAON (mistake in the puzzle? need the 5th drafted player (Tom Moore) not the 8th to pull the required S) |
Or use Jim Yates, instead of James Yates, though Football Reference only lists him as James. I found this card:
 _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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SuperSlug
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:28 pm Post subject: 1819 |
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| Suspence wrote: |
| SuperSlug wrote: |
| ADRIANPETERAON (mistake in the puzzle? need the 5th drafted player (Tom Moore) not the 8th to pull the required S) |
Or use Jim Yates, instead of James Yates, though Football Reference only lists him as James. |
ah, ty _________________ Some people are lost in the shuffle. I'm shuffling along with the lost. |
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LordKinbote
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:29 pm Post subject: 1820 |
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ADRIAN PETERSON is correct.
And then there was one. |
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SuperSlug
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:38 pm Post subject: 1821 |
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| Suspence wrote: |
3. This food often fails to meet international standards. (Convert LSB from Hex to Dec)
HAMBURGER = 85
MERCURY = 63
COLON = 58
UNION = 42 |
I have a question. Why is HAMBURGER 85 and not 84?
HAMBURGER = U+1F354
54 base16 -> 5(16) + 4 = 84 base10 _________________ Some people are lost in the shuffle. I'm shuffling along with the lost. |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:41 pm Post subject: 1822 |
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You're correct on that one, and it wouldn't hurt to recheck all of my calculations. _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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SuperSlug
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:46 pm Post subject: 1823 |
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| Suspence wrote: |
| You're correct on that one, and it wouldn't hurt to recheck all of my calculations. |
I did recount the Braille and got the same number.
Edit:
HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX = 65
ESTEEMED = 76
HAMBURGER = 84
I DREAMED A DREAM = 70
LUXURY TAX = 70
BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID = 79
ADRIAN PETERSON = 85
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION = 82
Using
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII#ASCII_printable_characters
| Code: |
65 76 84 70 70 79 85 82
A L T F F O U R |
ALT F FOUR
Call in? _________________ Some people are lost in the shuffle. I'm shuffling along with the lost. |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 6:53 pm Post subject: 1824 |
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LOL. I have ALTFFOUR sitting on my spreadsheet, and it didn't mean anything to me. I didn't use ASCII, I was just calculating the amount above the threshold that each answer scored, which ends up being the same.
ALT+F4 would certainly make Watson unhappy. _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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LordKinbote
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 7:16 pm Post subject: 1825 |
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ALT F-FOUR is correct.
Annnddd....that's it. I guess I could find a way to do the runaround, but it's not really worth it. And we finished just in time for next year's Mystery Hunt! Yay!
If you guys want to actually participate this year, and are not on another team, Codex is always open to new people. |
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Suspence
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 7:55 pm Post subject: 1826 |
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LK, sincere thanks for hosting this. It was awesome.
As for next year, the whole hunt happens in a weekend? _________________ I hate people who try to write interesting things in their signature. |
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LordKinbote
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 7:59 pm Post subject: 1827 |
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| Suspence wrote: |
LK, sincere thanks for hosting this. It was awesome.
As for next year, the whole hunt happens in a weekend? |
MLK Jr. weekend at MIT. It starts Fri, January 18th at noon (EST) and finishes when it finishes usually between 36 and 52 hours later. Codex has lots of remote solvers. |
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jadesmar
Bad Puppy
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 8:05 pm Post subject: 1828 |
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Thank you for the puzzles.
I kind of hopped in near the end, and no one complained so I tried to keep going with what I could.
I am interested in helping with Jan 18, or doing this type of year long puzzle hunt next year. |
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gftt*
Guest
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 8:15 pm Post subject: 1829 |
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Thanks LK!
How many is "lots"? |
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LordKinbote
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 8:35 pm Post subject: 1830 |
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| gftt* wrote: |
Thanks LK!
How many is "lots"? |
A couple dozen, I'd think. |
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LordKinbote
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 8:38 pm Post subject: 1831 |
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| jadesmar wrote: |
Thank you for the puzzles.
I kind of hopped in near the end, and no one complained so I tried to keep going with what I could.
I am interested in helping with Jan 18, or doing this type of year long puzzle hunt next year. |
This goes for anyone: PM me some contact information (name and e-mail, mostly) and I'll figure out how to get you added to the Codex team (on the mailing list, mostly).
If there is a rerun of the Mystery Hunt next year, I probably won't be the guy to run it. Not that I didn't enjoy this, but I was personally invested in this hunt. It's both harder and less fun if you have no actual connection to the puzzles. I wouldn't be able to hint as effectively, for example. |
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gftt*
Guest
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LordKinbote
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2012 11:19 pm Post subject: 1833 |
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The winning team last year was estimated to have around 200 people on it. Codex is big, but not that big...and probably smaller now that we've won. The on-site contingent is also a couple dozen. |
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kaihuang
Icarian Member
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Posted: Sat Dec 01, 2012 3:24 am Post subject: 1834 |
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*Applause* Good job, and thanks for solving our puzzles!
Miscellaneous FYIs:
+ In response to gftt's question about Coming to a Location Near You: Here are the self-reported team sizes of the 21 teams that made submissions for this puzzle: 17, 20, 25, 25, 28, 29, 29, 30, 30, 35, 39, 40, 40, 53, 75, 75, 75, 95, 104, 180, 182+ (this last team didn't bother to figure out the number since they would fall in the puzzle's last bucket anyhow). Also, I'm pretty sure at least a few of these teams under-reported.
+ I feel LordKinbote is under-reporting Codex's team size (both on-site and remote contingents), assuming his "a couple" means 2 and not "a few". If you asked me, I would multiply those numbers by 1.5 or more.
+ Just to set the expectations for those of you who are considering joining Codex -- we are *not* trying to win the hunt next year. |
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jadesmar
Bad Puppy
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Posted: Sat Dec 01, 2012 3:28 am Post subject: 1835 |
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| kaihuang wrote: |
+ Just to set the expectations for those of you who are considering joining Codex -- we are *not* trying to win the hunt next year. |
In return, to set your expectations, I'm just trying to find some fun puzzles.  |
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kaihuang
Icarian Member
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Posted: Sat Dec 01, 2012 4:24 pm Post subject: 1836 |
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| jadesmar wrote: |
| kaihuang wrote: |
+ Just to set the expectations for those of you who are considering joining Codex -- we are *not* trying to win the hunt next year. |
In return, to set your expectations, I'm just trying to find some fun puzzles.  |
That's perfect. I just wanted people not to expect us to go all out and try to be competitive. If someone wants that hunt experience, then there are definitely other teams that can provide it. |
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Zag
Tired of his old title
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Posted: Sat Dec 01, 2012 4:40 pm Post subject: 1837 |
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| I stopped participating a while ago, but I've been following this thread all along. I just wanted to say how impressed I am with both the puzzles and those of you who solved them. Some of the leaps made me say "huh?" and the sheer doggedness left me awed. Well done, all! |
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gftt*
Guest
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Posted: Sun Dec 02, 2012 12:37 am Post subject: 1838 |
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| jadesmar wrote: |
| kaihuang wrote: |
+ Just to set the expectations for those of you who are considering joining Codex -- we are *not* trying to win the hunt next year. |
In return, to set your expectations, I'm just trying to find some fun puzzles.  |
Ditto.
200 people on a team seems pretty ridiculous, to be honest. |
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L'lanmal
Daedalian Member
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Posted: Sun Dec 02, 2012 2:41 am Post subject: 1839 |
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Some more solving stats, now that you've seen them all:
Total batting average:
Including backsolves and bupkis purchases, we received 3,118 answer attempts. 1,672 were correct, or 54% of them.
Highest batting average:
No incorrect answers were submitted for these puzzles, which is a testament to writing or testing or something.
Any Old Puzzle
Argh
Cookin'
Lowest batting average:
My Summer Vacation
1/29 correct answer attempts (3%)
1/18 forward-solves (6%)
(1 team attempted to backsolve 11 times unsuccessfully, then bought the answer)
In this thread there were a couple wrong submissions on this one, but mostly as an effort to guess the answer from having most of the letters.
Most often attempted backsolves:
B.J. Blazkowicz in 'Wintertime for Hitler' - 26
Potlines - 26
The Undiscovered Underground - 25
Most frequently submitted wrong answers:
Arigato or Domo Arigato - submitted for "Sounds Good to Me" 33 times
Chromatic - 15 times on "Of Course"
Pathway - 11 times on 5 different puzzles
Love - 11 times on "Eek!"
Privates - 9 times on "Blinkenlights"
On "Sounds Good to Me", many teams missed the answer length given in the bottom corner. On "Of Course", an intermediate message was "It's Chromatic!" which some took as the answer. Pathway was just a popular backsolve attempt. Love was the first half of the answer on "Eek!". I'm not sure what the deal with Privates was.
First solved:
Star Search (1/13/2012 1:18:52 PM by Setec Astronomy)
Last correct answer submitted:
Phantom of the Operator meta (1/15/2012 3:05:54 PM, by Immoral, Illegal, and Fattening, just before server close) |
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MNOWAX
0.999... of a Troll
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Posted: Sun Dec 02, 2012 2:55 am Post subject: 1840 |
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A quick question the " how hard can it be?" puzzle, how many people actually solved that one? I don't know too many people that have the entire library of top gear at their fingertips ( I mean, how many have one on here? ) (yes that was a thinly veiled brag) _________________ The Man The Myth The Legend
MNOWAX |
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