You are visiting your old friend Mike at Infinitely's Baking Shop. Just
as you arrived, he was taking out a fresh, infinitely long loaf of
bread. Both of its ends extend infinitely long in a straight line. The smell of the breads displayed on the infinitely long shelves feels so good.
...
> Both of its ends extend infinitely long in a straight line.
> If you grab one of the loaves of bread from the display, you can grab it by one of its ends and thus cut a single crust piece, but Jesse needs two, or he'll stay hungry.
answers include coiling the rope into something thick enough to be used as a bridge, selling it to a rope manufacturer to buy a helicopter, throwing the rope into the water to soak it all up, lassoing the tree and walking around the globe to keep it tied, melting the rope and turningit into a plastic boat (since modern ropes are made from petrochemicals), the infinite rope forming a black hole and bringing the island to you, waiting for the seasons to change and walking across the frozen lake...
I don't think there's an intended answer, usually interview questions aren't about getting the "right" answer as they are seeing what you try to do in the face of a problem
tbh if you can clearly explain why you think the question is stupid, you're probably fine :P (also I realised I read Anko's comment in a harsh negative tone, when it could also be delivered a lot nicer)
A siren is a woman who lures sailors into danger with her song. It's a dd: "warning" and "that woman is dangerous", although a siren isn't a warning, just a warning device.
@Ankoganit Yup. Defenitely took longer than creating the puzzle in the first place. (Although that also took quite a bit.) Hope it isn't solved in a matter of hours (minutes?) ;c)
@BmyGuest there's circumstantial evidence but, to my knowledge, there's no way to tell. It's been asked before. Perhaps employees have a way to query it, but neither mortals nor mods can.
Hmm, thanks. It's a shame though. I think it would be useful (meta) info for many people looking at queries. Maybe something to bring up on MetaStackExchange... (probably there already)
@Ankoganit I do a lot of pre-work with CorelDraw, the 3D work is done with Fusion360. As is the rendering, but it's a bit tricky (and I'm still learning)
I've had at least one question featured as a "hot network question" and during that time it got 1,000's of views in the course of a few days. But if you look at that question now you wouldn't have any way of knowing that that's where the bulk of it's view count came from.
Is there a way to find ...
@Deusovi Well, maybe. No-one else seems to bothered, not even on 15², so it's probably just me. But to me, the siren is the signal; the warning would be the message.
From today: "Alphabet chunk after D-E-F" (5) [to be fair, the theme was pretty constrained for this one], "Cat on ____ Tin Roof" (1, 3), "Comparative suffix" (3)
More of that nonsense huh. I mean, I suppose CC-SA gives a certain leeway there if they actually attribute in some meaningful way. I'm not sure if the content replicators bother, but - if they did what leg would we have to stand on then?
@Ankoganit ooh. I broke the top 60. (Puzzling Times in at #56)
@n_palum heh. I just ran across a bunch of CollectGet stuff looking for answers in Meta. It wouldn't be so bad but they mangled what they took on top of it.
Nemesis sees I have solved 75, whichi is correct, and that 74 of mine have been solved, as my 75th submission in reality is not present in the archive and so thus has no solver yet, as far as the archive knows.
I just wanted to test my encryption skills with this wonderful community that seems to be able to crack almost any code! I've made a few codes before, but almost always, they were encoded several times over, sometimes in several different languages, and not meant to be decoded by anyone but the r...
When linked with a choice it may well make you whine
And when builders have it, oh how they do pine.
To some it's an art where deceit may abound
Inside a location some suits lead around.
It's practically perfect when headed by me
It's leading the way for intoxicant free
The answe...
@Rubio FWIW I know offhand of exactly one novel that's circular in that sort of sense, namely James Joyce's "Finnegans Wake". Which doesn't seem likely to be anything to do with the answer.
My feeling about TGE's is that it's unlikely that "dynamic duo" refers to any particular pair of people (I think the most canonical pair would be Batman & Robin). More likely "dynamic" is an anagrind and there's an anagram of DUO or DUOX involved.
it's an annoying clue because "dynamic" could be def or anagrind and so could "novel", and "dynamic duo" could just about be a def and so could "circular novel" :-).
Well let me put it this way - it's like using "without" in a clue for me. I'll try to avoid it where possible (personal preferences) but if I fail to think of better I may just sneak one or two in :P
@Deusovi What OS/browser are you using? With chrome on Android it looks like your screenshot. Chrome on Windows 7 it looks like Mithrandir's screenshot: