Monday, August 14, 2023

Can you solve this week's puzzler?

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This Week's Puzzler

Upside Down Ice


Here is the new puzzler. The new short puzzler. 

My wife and I were leaving the house a while back, and right as we were about to walk out the front door she says, "Oh, wait a minute. I forgot to do something."

So, she leaves the front hall and walks into the kitchen. I have nothing better to do so I follow her into the kitchen. I see her open the freezer door. Then she takes out a tray of ice cubes. She slides the tray out of the little shelves that are in there in the freezer. You know, where you have all these different things piled up in there. Hamburger. Ice cream. Frozen veggies. All those things. Anyway, she takes the tray of ice cubes out, then turns it upside down and puts it back, face down on this shelf in the freezer. 

And I said, "What the heck did you do that for?"

And that is the puzzler. 

Why did she do this? And for bosun points, where were we going?

Good luck!

Answer the Puzzler »
Remember last week's puzzler?

Printing History

Okay, pay attention today all. This puzzler is long, and it has a lot of detail to it. This is a bit of history.

Here goes. 

It was a dark and stormy night in the summer of 1347 and a small Genoese trading post in the Crimea. The Hungarians and the Mongols had laid siege to this little trading post in the city-state of Genoa. So, some of the Mongolian soldiers began to get sick, during the siege. In fact, they got really sick and they began to die. 

One of the Hungarian generals said, "Hey, I got an idea. We'll build a catapult and fling these bodies over the wall. So the soldiers inside will get sick and die too. And then we can win the siege of the outpost." 

So, that's what they did. They catapulted the bodies over the wall into the outpost. 

However, some of the people inside the trading post managed to escape the siege. They escaped the city by boat. They sail for a while until they wind up in the Sicilian city of Messina. So they arrive there safely, or so they think... They arrive in the town with all their gold, and unknowingly, carrying this disease.

Within a couple of months, half the city of Messina is dead. Within six months, half of Sicily is dead. Within two years time, it spread to Italy, and Southern Europe, and by 1350, it spread all over the continent of Europe, up the Baltics, and into England, and killed roughly half the population of Europe. 

And of course, we all know this as the bubonic plague or the Black Death.

Okay, now we jump ahead about 75-100 years or so, and a fellow by the name of Gutenberg invents the printing press. So, there were other printing presses at the time, but they used wood and parchment. This one had a movable type and used lead and stuff. Very advanced for the time. And it printed on actual paper. And as luck would have it, there happened to be a lot of this special type of paper that Gutenberg would use to print on. There was a huge surplus of this paper available that made Gutenberg's invention a success.

Now the question is, how are these two things related? 

How could the bubonic plague have benefited Gutenberg and his invention of the printing press?

Good luck, all.

Find out here »
Congratulations to this week's
puzzler winner:

  Alvin Belt

Congratulations! This correct answer was chosen at random by our Web Lackeys.

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