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Search resuls for: "puzzlers"


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On a mid-October Monday, shortly before 9 a.m., 179 elite puzzlers made their way into the ballroom of a Toronto hotel and found their allocated seats for the World Sudoku and Puzzle Championships. Quiet descended as proctors distributed booklets for Round 1: nine Sudoku puzzles, with a 45-minute time limit. He is a three-time world Sudoku champion, and in 2018 he won the title of world puzzle champion, making him the first person to win both honors. The annual championship event comprises two days of Sudoku, followed by three days of other types of pencil-and-paper logic puzzles. There were also trickier variants, such as “Difference Sudoku,” for which the standard rules apply, but also each number shown in a circle between two adjacent cells indicates the difference of the numbers in those two cells.
Persons: puzzlers, Valentin Miakinen, Hwangrae Lee, Thomas Snyder, , Snyder, , Laura Tarchetti, Toni Borozan, Jouni Sarkijarvi Organizations: San Francisco Bay Area Locations: Toronto, France, Korea, San Francisco Bay, revel, Croatia, Finland
In March, a team of mathematical tilers announced their solution to a storied problem: They had discovered an elusive “einstein” — a single shape that tiles a plane, or an infinite two-dimensional flat surface, but only in a nonrepeating pattern. “I’ve always wanted to make a discovery,” David Smith, the shape hobbyist whose original find spurred the research, said at the time. The researchers might have been satisfied with the discovery and the hullabaloo, and left well enough alone. But Mr. Smith, of Bridlington in East Yorkshire, England, and known as an “imaginative tinkerer,” could not stop tinkering. Now, two months later, the team has one-upped itself with a new-and-improved einstein.
Persons: einstein, I’ve, ” David Smith, Smith, einstein ”, stein, Jimmy Kimmel, , , Marjorie Senechal Organizations: University of Oxford, Smith College Locations: Bridlington, East Yorkshire, England
She applied to be an associate puzzle editor at The New York Times in 2020 and got the job. I'd always loved puzzlesStarting in my late teens, I'd solve The New York Times Sunday crossword. I would submit them to The New York Times, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and the Los Angeles Times. Becoming the Wordle editor has been transformative in my personal and professional lifeI've had someone recognize me in a local store and ask, "Aren't you the Wordle lady?" Being the Wordle editor is a thrill, and it's an honor.
Kaylin Marcotte runs Jiggy Puzzles, which has sold more than 250,000 units in three years. She says word-of-mouth marketing — partnering with brands and customers — has helped it grow. I've always been a fan of word-of-mouth marketing for my small business. But it also created a powerful word-of-mouth marketing channel. Word-of-mouth marketing isn't necessarily the quickest or easiest win.
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