is sploofus down for everybody?
Posted: Mon Jul 14, 2014 9:40 am
Or just me?
Monday's "Daily Challenge" deals with the origins of a two-word item. You don't have to be an authority on word origins, however, to compete. You might be better served if you know your movies.
Go to https://www.guerrillatrivia.com/members ... lenge.aspx to compete.
This makes no sense.Bob78164 wrote:Three logicians walk into a bar and the bartender asks them, "Would you all like a beer?"
The first says, "I don't know."
The second says, "I don't know."
The third says, "Yes!"
All three of them want a beer. The first knows that he wants a beer but doesn't know whether the other two also want one, so he doesn't know whether they all want a beer. The second knows that he and the first logician want beers (because if the first one didn't want a beer, he'd say no), but doesn't know whether the third also wants one. From the first two answers, the third logician knows that both colleagues want beers, and since he also wants one, he knows that the answer is yes. --BobEstonut wrote:This makes no sense.Bob78164 wrote:Three logicians walk into a bar and the bartender asks them, "Would you all like a beer?"
The first says, "I don't know."
The second says, "I don't know."
The third says, "Yes!"
That was in a Yankee bar.Ritterskoop wrote:See, when some folks around here say "you all" it often doesn't mean You. All.
It just means whoever's first in line. So that first guy could have said "Yup" and been right.
You picked a good career path.Estonut wrote:This makes no sense.Bob78164 wrote:Three logicians walk into a bar and the bartender asks them, "Would you all like a beer?"
The first says, "I don't know."
The second says, "I don't know."
The third says, "Yes!"
You don't know what my career path has been nor whether I picked it or not.Bob Juch wrote:You picked a good career path.Estonut wrote:This makes no sense.Bob78164 wrote:Three logicians walk into a bar and the bartender asks them, "Would you all like a beer?"
The first says, "I don't know."
The second says, "I don't know."
The third says, "Yes!"
Don't be so pessimistic! Maybe this will help:Ritterskoop wrote:Yay! I got a cricket question right!
That is the only time that will ever happen, by the way.
Darn, someone beat me to registering the valuable cricket-breeding.com domain name!Male crickets create their chirps by rubbing their forewings together. One side of the wings contains a jagged edge. When the flat side of the wing rubs against the jagged side, this produces the chirp sound. Cricket males generally have three distinct song types. The “calling song” is the rhythmic, familiar chirp that you typically hear on a summer night. Its main purpose is just to attract some females. Then, there is the “courtship song”, which features faster, deeper sounding chirps. This particular song is used when a male is right about to mate. Finally, there is the “aggressive song”, which is a loud trill most often produced as two male crickets fight.
Estonut wrote:You don't know what my career path has been nor whether I picked it or not.Bob Juch wrote:You picked a good career path.Estonut wrote:This makes no sense.
I know it has nothing to do with logic.Estonut wrote:You don't know what my career path has been nor whether I picked it or not.Bob Juch wrote:You picked a good career path.Estonut wrote:This makes no sense.
So did I, not that it mattered.Ritterskoop wrote:Just got an email from Sploofus linking to this morning's question. I normally get it at 1:25 a.m.
Thanks. Kind of amazing to me—I got a new computer and suddenly my times are >1 second faster than they were on the old one. So looks like it's at least as much about that than getting questions right.MarkBarrett wrote:No wonder the original post was made. Keep it up.