Hello Rich, About the > puzzle, my (difficult) variation on it, asked in January in Pour La Science, has received only one correct answer, from a Canadian reader. Solution not yet published, other solvers are welcome. About the English version of my next article, two answers: -a press release (in two versions, French and English) summarizing the article is currently prepared by the magazine. If you wish, I will send you their press release in English, when it will be available. -Pour La Science will ask Scientific American (same press group) if they are interested by an English translation. If they are not interested, -and I think that they will not want to publish a second article on Sudokus- perhaps I will propose the article to another American magazine. Christian. _____ De : Schroeppel, Richard [mailto:rschroe@sandia.gov] Envoyé : mercredi 10 mai 2006 17:23 À : cboyer@club-internet.fr; math-fun@mailman.xmission.com Cc : Schroeppel, Richard; rcs@cs.arizona.edu Objet : RE: [math-fun] Sudoku articles I found the > puzzle in Ed's article to be the most interesting, more so than regular Sudoku. I solved it over a few days. Nothing dramatic, but a couple of new reasoning ideas. I have a memory of several other solvers, but it's faded. Of course the bigger puzzle is how these are devised. Will an English version of your history article be available? The 15-puzzle was popular in the late 1800's, and I wonder if there are cycles in the popularity of "math-ish" puzzles? Rich -----Original Message----- From: math-fun-bounces+rschroe=sandia.gov@mailman.xmission.com on behalf of Christian Boyer Sent: Wed 5/10/2006 8:47 AM To: 'math-fun' Subject: RE: [math-fun] Sudoku articles Two articles. 1) In the next issue of Scientific American will be published the English translation of the excellent article of Jean-Paul Delahaye on Sudokus, initially published in French in the December 2005 issue of Pour La Science (see below my old email). 2) And in the next issue of Pour La Science, I will publish an article titled "Les ancêtres français du Sudoku" ("French ancestors of Sudoku") about a forgotten information, even in France: several French newspapers, end XIXth century, published numerous 9x9 grids very close, or using, Sudoku puzzles. Christian. -----Message d'origine----- De : math-fun-bounces+cboyer=club-internet.fr@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:math-fun-bounces+cboyer=club-internet.fr@mailman.xmission.com] De la part de Christian Boyer Envoyé : jeudi 24 novembre 2005 19:51 À : 'math-fun' Objet : [math-fun] Problem Puzzler 1999 Jean-Paul Delahaye publishes in the new issue of Pour La Science a very interesting article on Sudokus. He asked a very strange Sudoku problem WITHOUT any given numbers, only ">" and "<" signs between cells. He mentions that this problem was published in Puzzler, 1999, and that he does not know the solution. I have the solution, sent this morning to J.-P. Delahaye. Now looking for "Puzzler 1999" on Google, I find that Ed Pegg Jr. wrote an article in September 2005 including the same astonishing puzzle, figure 7 "Greater Than Sudoku" in: http://www.maa.org/editorial/mathgames/mathgames_09_05_05.html Perhaps that somebody else had already the solution? Ed, did you receive a solution to your article? Christian. _______________________________________________ math-fun mailing list math-fun@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/math-fun _______________________________________________ math-fun mailing list math-fun@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/math-fun