From ncramer@bbn.com Mon Oct 4 08:51:15 1993 Return-Path: Received: from LABS-N.BBN.COM by life.ai.mit.edu (4.1/AI-4.10) for /com/archive/cube-lovers id AA19338; Mon, 4 Oct 93 08:51:15 EDT Message-Id: <9310041251.AA19338@life.ai.mit.edu> Date: Mon, 4 Oct 93 8:40:53 EDT From: Nichael Cramer To: Ricardoh Queiroz Cc: raymond@cps.msu.edu, cube-lovers@ai.mit.edu Subject: Re: Seeking 5x5x5 cube >Date: Fri, 1 Oct 1993 15:15:49 -0500 (CDT) >From: Ricardoh Queiroz >Subject: Re: Seeking 5x5x5 cube > >Hi, >I also have interest in a regular 3x3x3 and I can't find it. >If anyone has any idea, please let us know. >Thanks, >Ricardo >queiroz@eepost.uta.edu Games People Play in Harvard Square had a number of 3X3X3 that go by the name "Fourth Dimension" or something like that (they various have logos and a picture that looks like a profile of Rubik on four of the center faces). It was something on the order of $10. It also seemed more cheaply made than my other, older cubes. It felt, well, "lighter" in my hand and is rather more difficult to turn than I'm used to. It's not that they're unusable, and it's just not that they're just stiff, rather that they seem to be slightly out of alignment. Perhaps if you are someone who knows how to fine tune these things... N