If your patch cord is truly unlimited, you _can_ tell two wires apart. You need 10 miles of patch cord, though. Franklin T. Adams-Watters -----Original Message----- From: Michael Kleber <michael.kleber@gmail.com> A week or two ago I heard for the first time the following enjoyable brain teaser: --------- A company has just buried a 10-mile-long cable containing 120 individual wires. Unfortunately, the project was overseen by a summer intern, and the sad result is that the wires are entirely unlabelled. Your job is to fix this mess: label each wire with the same name on both ends. The tools you have available are (1) a battery, (2) a lightbulb, and (3) an unlimited amount of patch cord. And (4) your feet, and no other form of transportation. You start at one end of the cable, and can do as much as you want there, but then you need to walk down to the other end and repeat. In how few trips down the length of the cable can you label the wires? --------- ... p.s.: An interesting observation is that with n=2 the problem is unsolvable; there is no way to tell the two wires apart. -- It is very dark and after 2000. If you continue you are likely to be eaten by a bleen.