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00:01
@bobble people do not seen to understand how this site works...
00:51
might as well ping @DarrelHoffman since you're talking about him
01:32
A share: yesterday (July 24 GMT) was not the best day to try out Independent's cryptic crossword... A lot, if not all, of the entries were fair but hard to parse. And there were some I simply couldn't get. I got 67% done then gave up lol
interesting, haven't tried that one yet
0
Q: Ten Pills in Ten Countries

Admiral JotaYou're about to leave for an international vacation where you'll be visiting ten different foreign countries. To make sure you don't catch any local diseases, your doctor has given you ten pills and instructed you to take one as you arrive in each country. The pills all contain different medicine...

i generally like the independent a lot, the biggest thing that bugs me is sometimes you're expected to know a bunch of britishisms (or worse yet to have followed british news)
obv both are on me for, well, doing the crossword of a british newspaper hehe
Lol yeah
01:54
Feedback fwiw (altho idk if anyone else other than Jafe does Independent crosswords):
rot13(V yvxr guerr naq guvegrra qbja: gurl unq arng pyhvatf. V qba'g yvxr bar qbja, ubjrire. Gur vaqverpg nantenz ("qravny" = "ab" gura nantenzzrq jvgu "vf" gb trg "fvba") V guvax V pna gbyrengr, fvapr gung jnfa'g uneq gb trg, ohg ubj gur urpx jnf V fhccbfrq gb xabj gung n "zna" jnf n purff cvrpr? Vg'f abg rira n fgnaqneq bar...)
02:08
a poetic way to say "that's... sadly" would be "alas, it is", and -itis is a suffix for diseases, but i can't find any reference to an eye disease named alasitis so maybe not
 
5 hours later…
06:52
I do the Independent cryptics fairly regularly, and I haven't done the Filbert from Sunday, so your rot-thirteening is appreciated. (The online interface is rubbish, so I usually print it out in the office and do it with a coffee when I come home from work. Today, I got a paper jam -- I'm in trouble already before reading the first clue.)
07:13
Is it just imagination? Folks here seem to be more cryptic by the instant.
Just lookin. And appreciatin.
Send me back into the corner. See you there, @oAlt.
@MOehm :D
it's very possible you'll get the entries faster in general, though. I'm still an amateur after all
@whiskrs Indeed
Let's see. There's also that "wavelength" thing -- some days I'm on a setter's wavelength, others I'm not. And some days I'm just slow and can't even spot the obvious things.
07:49
To quote: "Does the cover reveal the book?"
08:04
@MOehm understandable
08:41
0
Q: Double chess stalemate with 60 units

LaskaInspired by Symmetrical Chess Position With No Legal Moves Can you arrange on a chessboard 18 kings, 6 rooks and 6 bishops of each colour (i.e. 60 units, leaving 4 empty squares) so that neither side has a legal move. Ignoring reflections, rotations and colour swaps, how many unique solutions are...

0
Q: Fit all pieces inside the square

Tamás SengelSuppose you have n number of shapes and a square next to it. You have to determine whether the shapes fit inside the square without overlapping. What is a generic way to determine whether it's possible? Example:

09:31
@oAlt i think the word you object to actually clues reversal, not anagramming - etymologically it means rot13(jvgu uvaqre cneg pbzvat orsber)
but yeah tough puzzle for sure
 
1 hour later…
10:51
@Jafe ah you're right
That wasn't my main objection, but thanks for clarifying what the clue actually meant. I'm not sure why rot13(V nffhzrq vg jnf na nantenz vaqvpngbe)...
Oh my gosh, I double checked the fifteensquared solution article for that crossword and it does already say it's a reversal, rot13(engure guna na nantenz)...... what the heck was my brain on?
 
3 hours later…
13:40
-3
Q: Will we see a larger size on upcoming Iphone?

John CarlsonWhat do you guys think? iphone is getting bigger each year and its kind of weird see cell phone getting larger when the tech is getting smaller.

 
1 hour later…
14:43
@Jafe not always worth dragging a moderating discussion into main chat
 
1 hour later…
15:59
If my flag gets declined (mod) or refuted (review) I'm going to end up bringing it to meta.
Have an SO analogy prepared already to get the point across
@oAlt Well, now that I've done (that is started and given up on) the Filbert, I can say that today was one of my slow days. I couldn't get into the puzzle at all and had only the three hidden answers in the NE after my first pass.
Later I tried to get a bit farther with access to an online dictionary, but that didn't really help. In the SE, my only entry was 26. Perhaps I was just caught on the wrong foot, but I didn't enjoy this at all and should have given up earlier.
(But I don't object to the first three letters in 1d; I think that's a fairly common equivalence in crosswords.)
16:40
@MOehm Same, I got the hidden word clues early on. But I couldn't progress much without the aid of online resources. And even when using online resources I felt the urge to give up which I did.
(I think I spent significantly more time staring at my screen than actually solving the crossword... My brain was just empty most of the time)
Well, another day, another crossword.
16:59
0
Q: 10 people ,6 dine at a time. How many dinner event needs to be done so that each 3 person has dinned together?

2FaceManAssume 10 people numbered 1-10 have to be invited for dinner events. Hotel can accommodate only 6 at a time. So they have planed to invite in batches as requirement is each person should have had dinner with other person. A person can be invited to more than 1 event. What is the minimum number of...

1
Q: Two mystical trees

SlowMagicBehold, the mystical Tree of B: Notice that every path from trunk to canopy forms a word. You should see 16 words (from left to right: BLOOM, BLOOD, BLOWN, BLOWS, BLAND, BLANK, BLASÉ, BLAST, BROOK, BROOM, BROWN, BROWS, BRAID, BRAIN, BRASH, BRASS). Once upon a time, the Tree of B had a sister...

17:27
Obviously Recommend Deletion. Is this a "Thank You?"
I don't think it matters much in this case and I can get away with no comment needed.
But, it doesn't really fit "Comment on another post", which might be a request for information or otherwise valuable discussion that is out of place.
18:21
Hello! I've been thinking of a repeatable way to turn words into numbers, like if I was calculating a checksum. I'm curious to see how long it takes for you people to get all the passages right, but I wonder if it would be an on-topic question for the site.
The idea would be to let each partecipant tell me three words or sentences they want to see the chechsum of, and see who needs less hints. I have no idea if there's enough information to solve the problem this way.
(maybe this is a question for Meta?)
@Zachiel I can’t speak to topicality, but the format (a question that changed as people interact with it) wouldn’t work on Stack Exchange, as far as I can tell.
C4 hint: The answer comes etymologically from Gaelic.
I was thinking about adding the hints in ROT13 as a comment under answers. If that's still not OK, somebody wants to try? I would still have no idea where or how but... I'm open to ideas that don't involve any of us giving personal data away.
Yeah. The closest thing would be to provide a set of input words yourself and gradually expand it if the puzzle isn't solved. Once the puzzle is solved, the rule is public, however, so you cannot test this on several people.
The game as you describe it -- someone asks, you answer -- could perhaps be done in a dedicated chatroom. (But perhaps not. There used to be rather active chatrooms for certain games such as Codenames, but I don't know whether they are still active.)
I think, akin to the ball game (which I don't know under which name you know), you could prove success without telling the answar but by giving more correct examples.
(the balla game is the one where some people are in a circle and one has a ball, the ball gets passed around and in the end somene asks who has the ball. Which is very soon revealed to not always be the one that physically holds it)
But I do think it's not really good for SE's format, which is why I'm here asking about it :p
I might, on the other hand, test if a first set of hints is enough with a question, maybe some solvers will get it. Or I might discuss it with someone who's good at puzzles to see if the information I'll be giving is enough. Or... nah, I'll probably do nothing.
@MOehm Wait, I had missed this. This looks like it.
18:44
The "What is an X word?" puzzles in the category often work that way. Sometimes a hint towards the pattern is given, sometimes, more "fodder" is added.
0
Q: How to deal with old unanswered puzzles?

kaitlynmm569I have a puzzle that was posted back on June 22nd of this year. The first partial answer was posted a day later (6/23), and was last edited the day after that (6/24). The last comment on that answer was 6/25. The last activity on that post from someone other than me was 7/8, a comment asking for ...

19:10
damn, writing this question is harder than I thought.
@MOehm They're not active anymore, but games sometimes happen in the PPCG gaming Discord server.
@Zachiel Ah, the puzzle-maker's lament, a familiar cry...
If I said why, that would be a hint... let's just say that I don't have everything I need here with me to write the hints.
19:31
@Mithical I see. I've never really participated in those games, but I thought that might be something Zachiel could use.
20:23
Welp, disputed. All Looks OK. Meta post coming later...
urgh typo :(
 
4 hours later…

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