KenDoku

Conceptis is launching a new puzzle. A sample puzzle is on the left, the solution on the right. The numbers obey the same row and column restrictions as sudoku. The blocks have to satisfy the math clues in the upper left. For example, 20X means that the three numbers have to satisfy A * B * C = 20. Might be 1, 4 and 5 or 2, 2 and 5. The interesting thing about these puzzles is that they start out with no digits filled in.
I’ve been solving Conceptis sudokus in the newspaper for some time now. My only complaint is that they’re too easy. The KenDokus look pretty easy too. The 3X block has to be 1, 1 and 3 with the 3 in the corner to prevent the 1s from being in the same row or column. The same is true of the 5X block since 5 is also prime. So we already have four of the 1s filled in, and the row and column constraints leave only one spot for the fifth 1. And so forth. Too easy. Maybe a 9-by-9 KenDoku would be more challenging.
I’m usually skeptical of attempts to market variations of a classic puzzle. These things seem like solutions in search of a problem, or products in search of a market. I don’t want something similar to a sudoku, but different. I don’t want:
New! Improved! Now with baking soda!
I want something exactly like a sudoku, but harder.
Banksy grafitti
Memorial park bench
Air fish
Readability
| Speech | Grade level |
| Kennedy Inaugural Address | 10.8 |
| Reagan “Tear Down This Wall” | 9.8 |
| Lincoln “Gettysburg Address” | 9.1 |
| Martin Luther King “I Have a Dream” | 8.8 |
| Obama 2004 Democrat Convention | 8.3 |
| Obama Victory Speech “Yes, We Can” | 7.4 |
Global Language Monitor analyzed the words in several speeches and assigned grade levels, or reading levels, to each. There are a number of readability metrics and they pretty much agree on specific texts. GLM gives Obama a 9.3 in the last Presidential Debate, and McCain a 7.3.
For comparison, another source gives George W. Bush a 6.7 and Al Gore a 7.6 in the 2000 debates.
To carry on the school analogy, my impression during the campaign was that Obama was speaking to the students who were headed for community college or university, while McCain was speaking to those headed for vocational training. This made Obama an elitist who looked down on the regular folks bitterly clinging to their guns and Bibles. I don’t know who Sarah Palin was speaking to, maybe the special education kids.
Critics Rant has an online readability analyzer. How readable is Regruntled?

OK, I think that’s fair. In comparison, the most difficult blog I read is Overcoming Bias. It’s also one of the most rewarding, but it’s not for everyone. Their readability is:

Map made out of Spam

Artist Michael Arcega made a map of the world out of Spam:
“Spam’s diasporic nature is symbolic of America’s ongoing influence on many nations. S-P-A-M is M-A-P-S in reverse.”
Whack a mole

Hammacher Schlemmer’s personalized Whac-A-Mole game: $35K.
This is the Whac-A-Mole game that can be personalized to replace the standard mole heads with molded caricatures using pictures of members of your family, past managers, boyfriends/girlfriends, or any desired combination of personalities.
Letting off steam: priceless.
Meat hat
McPizza

Pizza dough, tomato sauce, two cheeseburgers, fries, McNuggets, topped with mozzarella. More pics here. It seems that there is a general category of recursive junk food, that is junk food used as ingredients for junk food. Another example is Deep fried hamburger. Do people think that the two levels of junkification cancel each other out, leaving a healthy meal? Is it like -1 times -1 equals +1?



