From johnf@apollo.com Tue Jan 7 14:20:49 1992 Return-Path: Received: from amway.ch.apollo.hp.com by life.ai.mit.edu (4.1/AI-4.10) id AA03714; Tue, 7 Jan 92 14:20:49 EST Received: from xuucp.ch.apollo.hp.com by amway.ch.apollo.hp.com id Tue, 7 Jan 92 13:11:49 EST Received: by xuucp.ch.apollo.hp.com id ; Tue, 7 Jan 92 13:03:11 EST Message-Id: <9201071803.AA19854@xuucp.ch.apollo.hp.com> Received: by daphne.ch.apollo.hp.com id AA02034; Tue, 7 Jan 92 13:02:30 EST From: johnf@apollo.com Date: Tue, 7 Jan 92 11:45:34 EST Subject: Square One To: cube-lovers@life.ai.mit.edu I got given one of these things for Christmas (well, actually I gave it to myself). I was wondering if anyone has any good basic operators that they would like to share. I would imagine that the puzzle must be less complex than a true cube, but the restricted set of moves make solving it more complicated than you might think! [I currently have six corners correct, but I still have two (diagonally opposite) corners interchanged. The cube-solving technique that I used for a real cube doesn't work here - I need something different].