Thursday 21 March 2013

Today's Daily Brain Teaser (Mar 22, 2013)

Figure it out



Each sentence below contains a word that can be anagrammed to answer or describe the sentence.



Example: Craft that might tip in the ocean. Answer: Canoe (Anagram of ocean)



1. Bit of brush

2. Opposite of unite

3. Writings of a steno

4. They affix without paste

5. Having less reason for fears

6. Animal that may need a shoer



Excerpted from an old Reader's Digest





Check Braingle.com for the answer.

Today's Daily Trivia Quiz (Mar 22, 2013)

Song: "Respect"

How well do you know this song by Aretha Franklin?



Take the Quiz at Braingle.com

Creativity : Negative Thinking

Negative thinking is usually a bad thing, especially if it occurs in the form of premature judgment of an idea. However, sometimes intentionally thinking negatively can help you find weak points in your solution.



Think about the worst parts of your idea. Try to identify all the defects that you can. Be as critical and superficial as possible and keep a list of all the negative aspects of your idea. Once you are done, go over your list and identify the key defects. See if you can improve them.



This can be especially helpful if you are going to present your idea to a group or person who is going to judge it. If you already know the top few things that are wrong with it, you can have some arguments or alternative solutions prepared in your defense.

Vocabulary : Word of the Day : Redoubtable

re-doubt-a-ble



adj :: Worthy of respect or honor.



"Our boat lay along some miles from the redoubtable bank on which Cook's vessel was lost, 10th June, 1770." --20,000 Leagues Under The Sea by Jules Verne

Memory : Repeat Their Name

Have you ever been introduced to someone and then forgotten their name a minute later? Here's a little tip to help you remember. When you are introduced, make an effort to repeat their name out loud.



For example:

"It's nice to meet you, Bruce. My name is..." or

"My sister's name is Karin too!"



By just saying their name out loud, you will be reinforcing it in your memory and it will be much more difficult to forget. If you can link it to someone else that you know (like your sister in the above example), you will have one more way to help you remember.

The agony, the agony, some more agony and the ecstasy #5: Bring it on

I’m just trying to think about everything that’s happened relating to this job between now and the last part…


Received a cheque in the post for the deposit, which was nice


Made some prototype corbels


Got some stuff on order


Ooh, ooh, the massive cove cutter came from MLCS (can you tell I’m excited about that?)


I made a couple of jobs too – some ‘chicken proof’ kitchen cabinets, provençal style with chicken wire doors, and just finished a king size white oak bed which took aeons to spray. That’s in pieces on the bench at the moment, waiting for delivery. I got so sick of waiting around this morning for the finish to dry, I headed off to get timber for the wardrobe.


Never been to this place before but they have a good reputation and have been in business for 200 years.

So I arrive there, it’s not like my local timber merchants. You have to go in the showroom and ask for whatever it is you want to be lifted down from the orange shelving. I don’t mind the wait, this place has a few items of interest on display – I’m reminded of Lumberjocks looking at the pen turning blanks in cocobolo, purpleheart and zebrano.


They beckon me through, there is the bale of one inch mahogany (sapele) brought down for sifting through. I can’t believe it, and not in a good way. I make the Obi Wan Kenobi gesture, this is not the mahogany I’m looking for… it looks light, a guy in the store is good enough to run an offcut through the planer, yep, this is totally the wrong colour, salmon pink. It might be the right price but if I take it I will be making a rod for my own back when it comes to finishing this behemoth.


The gaffer comes over and we have a chat, he’s sympathetic to my plight ‘having been a maker of bespoke kitchens for years with six people working for him’, I ask him if he’ll fetch down the 2” stuff to look at. This is more like it, perfect in every respect, he gives me a hand sorting through the bale. Never just pick up a piece and hope for the best. We look for colour consistency, straightness, defects and warping. Nice to get someone else’s opinion on my selection too. He even rounds the cubic ft down as he tallies it up. I’m impressed.


Load the van, drive back 50 miles with the planks poking out the back, tailgate held as closed as it can go with a length of flex that was for something else. Hope I don’t get pulled by some narky cop for having an unsafe load (there was no danger of losing any of it), hope none of my bits and bobs in the back of the van get sucked out and scattered on the motorway behind me like in Hollywood, when a window gets shot out in a plane.


Get back cold but safe. I have it all unloaded and ready to go for the morning, just have to get that bed out the way, let the games commence…



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Crafty Puzzles

'Star Trek' International Trailer Holds Another Secret - Get The Big Picture (blog)



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGV6OfcML5FHUyBEE_96lofqvUNow&url=http://www.getthebigpicture.net/blog/2013/3/21/star-trek-international-trailer-holds-another-secret.html

Daily Sudoku: Fri 22-Mar-2013

http://www.dailysudoku.com/sudoku/png/2013/03/2013-03-22.png



Crafty Puzzles

Daily Monster Sudoku: Fri 22-Mar-2013

http://www.dailysudoku.com/sudoku/monster/png/2013/03/2013-03-22.png



Crafty Puzzles

Daily Squiggly Sudoku: Fri 22-Mar-2013

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Crafty Puzzles

[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of 'Penumbra: Requiem' - Bloody Disgusting








Bloody Disgusting



[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of 'Penumbra: Requiem'

Bloody Disgusting

Requiem is, quite simply, a puzzle game that attempts to wrap up the plot established in Black Plague and Overture, featuring the same protagonist and picking up directly after the events of the last game. However, there is barely any plot in Penumbra: ...





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Crafty Puzzles

Belmont Girl Scouts learn financial literacy from Cambridge Savings Bank - Boston.com



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHBMgwiUvr2WKH06116EW0rDFtZJw&url=http://www.boston.com/yourtown/news/belmont/2013/03/belmont_girl_scouts_learn_fina.html

'Oz the Great and Powerful' Intro Posted Online - Get The Big Picture (blog)



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGh-TGwd-Aw4RIjj5rm_0u5vBjUtA&url=http://www.getthebigpicture.net/blog/2013/3/21/oz-the-great-and-powerful-intro-posted-online.html

Mark Edward Grogan - Times Record News



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNEOkQITWPweqoOZQkpcw-1Y6nPb8w&url=http://www.timesrecordnews.com/news/2013/mar/21/mark-edward-grogan/

Capital Quiz: Friday, March 22 - The Dominion Post



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFvVqSnUbs6sI6rHHxsH3-DpQpqlA&url=http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/news/quizzes/8456530/Capital-Quiz-Friday-March-22

Problem Solved: The Egg Came First - Smithsonian (blog)



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGbvh8VcN7ZjQ_hrdAIPuQyEaSvvw&url=http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/smartnews/2013/03/problem-solved-the-egg-came-first/

Can't get out of bed in the morning? Try these apps and gadgets - The Denver Channel



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGFgOWRZotMh-V5w4y9qEiMCcy5lw&url=http://www.thedenverchannel.com/lifestyle/health/cant-get-out-of-bed-in-the-morning-try-these-apps-and-gadgets

Destruction of Death Star an Inside Job? Skywalker Family Benefits? See ... - Get The Big Picture (blog)



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNF2dWiqSKuUpQkH6yzQw3kePSiP1A&url=http://www.getthebigpicture.net/blog/2013/3/21/destruction-of-death-star-an-inside-job-skywalker-family-ben.html

NAVARRETTE: GETTING A SCOLDING, NOT AN ANSWER - U-T San Diego



via brain teasers - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNEmN01CATighe1sDU6LkTuG545u-g&url=http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/mar/21/tp-navarrette-getting-a-scolding-not-an-answer/

A puzzle where brainpower trumps jelly - Walla Walla Union-Bulletin









A puzzle where brainpower trumps jelly

Walla Walla Union-Bulletin

Then you discover that there are 19 more puzzles, and each seems more impossible at first glance than the last. But don't let this description scare you. You should play this game. It's probably the most rewarding puzzle game in terms of pure brain ...





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Crafty Puzzles

Building a chess-piece box that’s better than the pieces it contains

Building a chess-piece box that’s better than the pieces it contains


I’ve always loved playing games. As a kid living in Puerto Rico, my parents complemented the street Spanish I was learning with a Monopoly game in Spanish. I still have it today. By the time I got to high school, I was battling out Gettysburg over a monster, multi-map edition by SPI. Then it was off to college. My dorm room had no surplus space for games. But it did come with a roommate, Roy. So I picked up a cardboard chessboard along with some wood pieces to take my mind off the tough time calculus was giving me.


The pieces came in a wood box that was a bit crowded…



…and painted a terrible orange.



I suppose that’s great if you’re a Bronco fan (which I am,) but not so great now that I’ve become a self-proclaimed woodworker. The quality of the chess pieces themselves pale in comparison to the memories they’ve given me over the last 32 years. So I decided to give them a finely-crafted home.


The old box got the once-over with my ruler. That scrutiny led to this plan.




Materials selection & rough-cutting pieces

Classic French furniture draws upon a lot of beautiful mahogany. And if it’s good enough for Louis the XIV it’s good enough for my box. I harvested the side pieces from a piece of African mahogany I had left over from another project. It was ¾” thick so I resawed and planed the pieces to form two 5/16” halves, which were then cut to form the sides and front/back pieces.


For the top panel I resawed a 4/4 piece of maple and edge glued the pieces to yield a book-matched grain worthy of royalty.



Pre-glue-up details

My design called for everything to be assembled—bottom, lid, divider—for the glue up. So I had to complete many steps before the sticky stuff hit the edges.


With the pieces all trimmed to exacting size on a shooting board, I routed slots for the bottom (1/4” plywood) and the top panel (1/8” wide groove). The top panel got rabetted around the edges to give me a 1/8”.


The box has a divider to separate the black pieces from the white ones. I prefer this setup because it cuts down on the time it takes to sort and separate them for play. The divider is also made of ¼” plywood. I routed stopped dados in the front and back side panels to accept this piece, leaving a tinsy bit of room to accommodate the green lining that would adorn it. Next came a coat of Danish oil for the interior. Once that dried I applied the remaining green felt liner.



Joinery and glue-up

After dry-fitting the pieces, and tuning a bit here and there on the shooting board, I glued up the box. Once dry, I reinforced the butt joints by drilling 1/8” holes to take brass pins cut from a rod. These were glued in place with 5-minute epoxy.


After that, I sawed off the excess parts of the rods and sanded the entire external surface, progression from 180 to 2000 grits until I had a pleasing, shiny surface.



Final touches

The next step was to separate the lid from the rest of the box. I don’t have a table saw, nor do I trust sawing it off accurately by hand. So I put a 1/8” straight-cut bit into the router table and used it to make the kerf to separate box from lid. I took several passes, increasing the depth of cut each time until only the last 1/32” remained. A box cutter dispatched this last bit while also helping to dress up the edges to make them clean and true. A razor blade served to trim the green felt so that it was even with the top edges of the lower-half of the box.


After two coats of Danish oil dried, I attached cheap big-box-store hinges to join the lid with the box body, and a latch to secure the lid. I was a wee bit off, with the lid hanging over one side by about 1/64”, and under by that amount on the opposite side. So I planed these surfaces smooth, sanded them and finished them with Danish oil. The next day I applied two coats of paste wax.






The fun part came when I transferred the chess pieces to their new home.



Now they have a quality resting place to match the wonderful memories I’ve collected with them. And when I pass them on to my chess-playing nephew they’ll keep the pieces safe so the next generation of my family can make chess memories of their own in style.


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Crafty Puzzles