So, the 6/4 goes into the orange zone and the 6/3 goes into the pink = zone on the left side. Stack the 3/4 on top to close out the pink zone. Then we can use the 4/0 in the green 0 zone, the double 4 ...
Here's today's Strands answers and hints. These clues will help you solve The New York Times' popular puzzle game, Strands, ...
Texas homicide of Laura Pippin Danka, which remained unsolved for 45 years, now considered closed after perpetrator ...
In a moment of exceptional brilliance, Imaad Sohel Ajani, a student of Podar International School, Nerul (CIE Board), has set a new national record by solving the Pyraminx cube in an astonishing 1.01 ...
When 12-year-old Luke Thoresen left a comment on a YouTube video by user AdventureGamingHQ, he put his best foot forward. Or feet, actually. If the gamer behind the popular YouTube channel would grant ...
We've wondered for centuries whether knowledge is latent and innate or learned and grasped through experience, and a new research project is asking the same question about AI. When you purchase ...
This weekend, Edinburgh will host the first major cubing competition in Scotland since the Scottish Championships back in May ...
The Michigan Championship 2025, a Rubik's Cube competition, will take place in Port Huron from August 15-17. Spectators can attend the event for free at the Blue Water Convention Center. This weekend, ...
“The Carpool Detectives,” a true crime mystery that reads like a novel, begins in the liminal moment before the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the country and concludes on an upbeat note two and a half ...
Need to solve a problem? You might want to sleep on it—for about 20 minutes. New research suggests that taking a quick, deep nap may help lead to a “eureka” moment, as scientists reported last week in ...
"Purdubik's Cube" was developed and built by undergraduate students Junpei Ota, Aden Hurd, Matthew Patrohay and Alex Berta. Purdue University Blink and you might miss it: A new robot developed by ...
Blink and you'll miss it: A Purdue University student engineering team has built a robot that can solve a Rubik's cube in one-tenth of a second — faster than the average time it takes to blink an eye.