I was bored, so I got my sister to film me being dumb. Not the best shot of the actual solve, but it was fun lol. Also I'm bad at OH so I stopped swinging much at the end so that was lame.
So, to practice PyQt5, I decided to make a simple Lights Out game for practice, which made me think of methods for it. Right now I just "drag" the light to one side, but I can't do anything with it from that point. So i thought it would be interesting to explore its methods and algorithms.
I've had this idea, starting from when I started trying out ZZ. I want to try to make a program (With help ofc) that crunches through every possible 2-look ZBLL method (Or would it be 2-look EO LL method, correct me on my terminology) to find the best one. So it would test methods like...
So, I probably should made this thread first, before going off and posting 600 times before anyone knew some idiot sociopath had joined the forums. I'm not that late though, right? anyway, I can't wait to get to know where all of you live so I can send my robo pizzabumper assassians to take you...
I've been working on a little Python cube simulator type thing, partially just to learn Python better and partially to have a way to mess around with AI, alg genning and whatnot. So I made this thread for me to get help cause I'm a python newbie, and for people to suggest ideas for me to...
This thread is for people to propose and document the results of dumb cubing challenges. For example, someone could pose the challenge "Solve a 7x7 lubed with glue", and then rich people with spare 7x7s can try the challenge and video/write what happened. I got the idea from bouncing on a...
So, my sister gave me this idea as we were walking home from a resturant. It's kind of like team blind, except the handicap of the solver isn't being blidfolded, it is that they are a non-cuber and they don't know how to solve a cube, and must do so by oral instructions.
Rules:
The cuber giving...
So, I've been fiddling with scrambling with only half turns, then solving with only half turns. I have a method that is by no means efficient, but it generally gets it done. In a nutshell, I solve two opposite layers, edge permutation on one doesn't matter, then by using (R2 U2)x3, I get it to a...
I don't know very much about machine learning, but do any of you think it would be possible to generate human usable methods with a machine learning ai?
This probably wouldn't work, but would it be beneficial to reverse the magnets in edges so the pieces repel each other instead of attracting? It would still align the faces well i think, and it would reduce friction as well. Although getting strong enough magnets to actually cause any friction...