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1:22 AM
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Q: Mini Ripple Effect puzzles

Alexandros 9I enjoyed this puzzle so much that I created some mini versions of it for fun. I signed up to share them with everyone. The rules are the same: Each region with n cells contains all the numbers from 1 to n and if two cells with the same number k are on the same row or column then there are at lea...

 
1:35 AM
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Q: A Gathering of Number-Theorists

Bernardo Recamán SantosA certain number of the 5000 members of the World Arithmetical Society (each of which has a different membership number between 1 and 5000) got together to discuss a problem. Much to their surprise, when they were lining up for lunch they discovered that their membership numbers formed a consecut...

 
 
2 hours later…
4:01 AM
2
Q: Where is Steven the Stegosaurus?

suomynonAThis is an entry to the Fortnightly Topic Challenge #27: treasure-hunt. Steven the Stegosaurus has been kidnapped! It's now up to you to save him. When you enter Steven's cave, the only thing you can find is a note that Steven has left for you, along with a picture of him. Here it is: I...

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Q: Re order the clues

user33082The clues are out of order when decoded. What's the correct order? 1. A common color 2. A rank in the army 3. A popular candy bar 4. A publishing house 5. A roofer for cottage? 6. Orwells' true surname 7. An indisputable rule of science 8. A month of the year 9. Paradis on earth 10. An official s...

 
 
8 hours later…
12:01 PM
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Q: Help! My animals have gone missing

LevieuxI need your help. I am the proud owner of 17 animals. Unfortunately they have all gone missing in the past few weeks and I have a feeling they could be hiding in the States somewhere. Can you help me retrieve them? $$\begin{array}{align*} \textbf{1a}&\text{South Carolina, California, Oregon, ...

 
12:55 PM
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Q: Lifespan puzzle

Rob SedgwickSue and Thomas both lived for 17916 days, although they were born in different years in the same calendar (the modern Gregorian one). Thomas was 2 days older than Sue when he died. How can this be? Sue was 49 years and 18 days old when she died Thomas was 49 years and 20 days old when he died

 
1:15 PM
Gamen!
 
GAmen
 
Gamen!
Any luck with the next part for the steganography?
6b has 9 words and probably gives 9 letters
 
 
1 hour later…
2:26 PM
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Q: The Mystery of Hareraiser

David StarkeyHareraiser is an old game, released in the UK back in the 80s for several systems. It's created by the people that solved the book Masquerade (and offered the same prize). The game was never solved, and the prize had since been sold and currently resides with the original owner and creator of t...

 
2:49 PM
@Techidiot are the imgur links case sensitive?
 
@Matt Yes they are
 
I believe they always are
 
then you have a few more options to try in the stegano puzzle
 
But I ain't getting nothing with that piece
Like what? Did you got any thing?
biggo is a either a word or its saying big O
But i.stack.imgur.com/zOjyd.png gives nothing
 
Never heard of the "word" biggo
 
2:51 PM
I didn't get anything either, I was just wondering if you tried
 
I have tried some combinations, reversing it, capitalizing O, considering O as 00, switching j with i but nothing seems to work
I remember Rubio having a script to try all combinations @Rubio you here? :D
Big might also indicate jpg image. But no combinations work with that as well
 
@Techidiot Imgur treats .jpg and .png as the same - if it's really a jpg, then going to i.stack.imgur.com/abcde.png will give you the same image
 
Oh okay. Didn't knew that
 
GAmen @Deusovi
 
Why is the A capitalized, anyway? :P
 
2:58 PM
Good Afternoon/morning/evening/night
 
Feb 14 at 17:00, by dcfyj
For future linking reference (As I'll probably start using this): G(ood) A(fternoon) m(orning) e(vening) n(ight)
 
I know what it means, but why the capitalization on the A?
 
@Matt Good time of day to you too!
 
Afternoon is typically capitalized, no?
 
...No?
 
2:59 PM
Well, I don't then, I like it that way
 
I'm curious why afternoon would get capitalized and none of the other times of day
 
I don't know, I got in my head somewhere that it was for some reason...
this implies no
 
CCQ: are rotations allowed as part of wordplay?
 
Rotations as in rot-n?
 
or rotten?
:P
 
3:10 PM
yes
 
They're not standard, but if you find a good enough indicator and indicate the shift somehow, it's probably fine
 
Perfect. When have I not stretched the rules? :P
2
 
It's almost done
 
3:33 PM
-1
Q: Hidden message in a photo

ivamus And it comes with the message: S pe c tare su pra te What is the hidden message? I haven't been able to find it.

 
4:24 PM
@Techidiot Done (in comments to the existing almost-there answer).
 
I don't see how that's the answer to the riddle, but if it works, that's fine by me
 
:D
@GarethMcCaughan Glad you figured it out.
@Deusovi I have mentioned the enumerations, the riddle is easy to figure it out isn't it?
Also, I kept all letters of FLAG in the first image at the corners but it seems, TGE figured out what to do without that
 
@Deusovi DEAR sounds like DEER. A diary has the purposes stated and if you open it a little and rest it on a flat surface, it looks as shown.
 
I don't get the "oh my sweets" part
 
term of endearment
though not one I've ever actually heard
 
4:28 PM
Ohh
 
It's often used here in India to show endearment.
 
I think I've heard "my sweet", singular, though here in the UK I think it would feel rather archaic / literary / pretentious as an actual way of addressing a lover or child or whatever.
 
Same in the US. (Although maybe not "pretentious".)
 
Indian English is more of a UK one I guess
@Deusovi Any progress on Sid's puzzle?
 
yes, more like UK. But also (at least this is my impression) often more "serious" in tone.
 
4:33 PM
Haha ^
 
is that "haha, how true" or "haha, how ridiculously wrong"?
 
Pretty sure tech lives in the US
 
Its how ridiculously true ;)
 
@dcfyj he just said "here in India"
 
@dcfyj What? Why do you say that?
 
4:35 PM
Ah, I'm only half paying attention, didn't see he said that.
 
@Techidiot Glad to see my observational skills aren't too rubbish.
 
@GarethMcCaughan You might have actually worked with a few, so you know things. :)
Btw, I never knew you belonged to UK. I thought you were an American.
 
Actually I've worked with surprisingly few people from India, given that I've spent most of my working life in the tech industry. I'm going more off what I've seen online and heard on the phone.
I was born in the US but live in the UK.
(and have lived in the UK since age ~4)
And my family's all from Ireland. So I claim the right to call myself American, English, Irish, British according to convenience.
 
Nice!
Oh, on phone! I cannot be more sure why you take the tone as serious :D
Sportsman,say,received message.? What's with 2 CCCC's?
 
4:40 PM
I only see one.
 
@Techidiot Sid realized he made an error and corrected it
 
(the 2 is the number of stars)
 
That too
 
or am I misunderstanding why Techidiot says 2?
 
:p I didn't see Sid solving the last CCCC
 
5:06 PM
received message seems like it could be defining Roger, but while there are probably plenty of players of sport named Roger, it seems tenuous
 
I think say refers to sounds like
So, it could be Roger -> Federer probably
 
say could be a sounds like, or a for instance
 
That's precisely what Tech said lol
 
@dcfyj I thought Tech said "say" = "sounds like" whereas Sconibulus said "say" = either "sounds like" or "for instance". If it's referring to Roger Federer then it's a for-instance rather than a sounds-like.
 
I guess? reads the same to me
 
5:12 PM
(I bet it is ROGER, and agree with Sconibulus that "sportsman, say" -> ROGER is a bit weak.)
 
@Sconibulus You may go for next. It should be the correct answer
Roger—"I have received all of the last transmission" in both military and civilian aviation radio communications. as per the wiki
It's Voice Procedure hence, Say
 
@Techidiot yeah, I suppose "say" could be being used that way. Sportsman -> ROGER still seems rather weak. I think we should wait for Sid's confirmation, though I think there's a 95% chance Sconibulus's answer is the intended one.
 
Sid's not here since last 23 hrs. Hope he is back soon
 
5:37 PM
yeah, I think I want to wait because I don't feel sure, also it might give me time to make up a better puzzle :)
 
 
1 hour later…
7:01 PM
0
Q: Cryptic clues for fun

sambaHey some cryptic crossword clues to munch on 1) Information regarding loan in Dubai perhaps (7) 2) Some men deserve death (3) 3) Picture facing the past? (4,2,3,6)

 
Sid
7:30 PM
Yes, @Sconibulus ROGER is correct.
 
CCCC: Crawler trap top spins discourse (7)
 
Sid
@Gareth @Rubio Pins please ^
 
0
Q: Writing in the Dust

Spencer FlemingAs you continue down the corridor, you come across a door and panel, clearly left untouched for many years. Hoping to get lucky, you try the door but it is locked. On the panel is a line of 6 buttons, colored RED, ORANGE, YELLOW, GREEN, BLUE, and PURPLE. As you search, you notice writing in the d...

 
7:57 PM
Done and done.
 
Sid
I am thinking that is PERORAT. With Pot being spun and put in erra?(Err might mean error. Crawler trap is some programming error, google says me.)
 
I'm not familiar with that word
 
then I guess that's not the answer ... haha
 
Sid
Lol. Okay.
 
 
2 hours later…
9:42 PM
0
Q: Help me find my friend Bill

Admiral JotaMy friend Bill can get a bit "eccentric" if he doesn't take his medication, and I'm afraid he's off them again. He hadn't been answering his phone for the last week or two, so I went over to his apartment today to check on him. There was nobody there, but I found this note he had left for me: ...

 
9:58 PM
Thoughts on the CCCC: If you reverse ("spin") "trap top", you get "pot part", which is a relatively common crossword clue for ANTE (as in, a poker pot). I suppose it could also clue something like LID or HANDLE but that seems less likely to me.
 
But the clue suggests that "discourse" is being spun, not "trap top".
Ah, never mind - you could parse it as "crawler | trap top spins | discourse"
Still, I think that might be too indirect
in cryptics, you don't modify phrases in a clue to make more clues
 
in my world, "trap top spins" uses "spins" as an anagram indicator to give Pop-Tart™. because Pop-Tart™.
 
mmm pop tarts
 
ikr?
 
may be eating a pop-tart
 
10:05 PM
may be eating some soon
Ok, best / worst PopTart flavors. Go!
best: Chocolate Fudge, warm, with a glass of milk. worst: unfrosted strawberry, cold.
@Techidiot For the record, I tried all the upper/lower combinations for both biggo and zojyd and found no relevant looking images. bIgGO.jpg is, perhaps, interesting, but it doesn't seem likely.
 

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