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Subject: 
Re: The Law of Falling Lego
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.castle
Date: 
Wed, 26 Jan 2000 06:11:17 GMT
Viewed: 
1001 times
  
In lugnet.castle, Bill Farkas writes:
I think I've discovered another law of physics! Have you ever noticed that a
piece of falling Lego will always end up in the most difficult spot to see
and/or reach!! I firmly believe that we are dealing with some sort of
artificial intelligence here. The Lego, as it is falling, is using some kind • of
radar device to seek out the most remote and obscure spot in the room; and • then
it calculates the angle and trajectory at which it must hit the floor to • bounce
into that precise spot. The smaller pieces seem to have a greater capacity for
this and also a greater desire for escape - they seem to flee in higher
numbers. As for the pieces that never get found, I envision some kind of
underground railroad that secretly leads them on their journey to freedom.
Although I have no evidence of the underground railroad, the Law of Falling
Lego has been documented many times over - I just wish I could figure out how
they do it!! Any theories?


"I'm NOT PLAYING, I'm CREATING!"
Bill

I believe there is another related force involved here.  Have you noticed that
if you "create" from the spill method on a large floor of any type that
gravity seems to cluster bricks together.  As you sift, spirals of brick move
outward and create new clusters.  An oddity that occurs within this system is
the vanishing brick effect, similar to what you describe.  Any given brick
will become visible through the course of a sift and search expedition, only
to vanish when the hunt turns toward it.  This can cause a simple model
construction to extend into the hours when all sane folk go beddy-bye.  This
leads me to believe that a brick free from a well constructed model is either,
a) shy, b) unwilling to experience "one-ness" with a collective, c) an
anarchist, or d) the strggle between good and evil is taking place right there
on your floor!
This cannot be cured unless the user sorts every single brick into separate
colonies comprised of only bricks of the same size and function.  Separation
cannot, however cure the bouncing brick problem, as it is common among all
single individual bricks.
I have not got enough time on my hands.
Aaron > maniac@vol.com



Message has 1 Reply:
  Re: The Law of Falling Lego
 
(...) for (...) The stated above is *exactly* why I (used to) build in a room with a marble- like tiled floor that is (other than bricks) totally empty, with all the pieces sorted into little yogurt cans (washed of course ;-) But this was an attic (...) (25 years ago, 26-Jan-00, to lugnet.castle)

Message is in Reply To:
  The Law of Falling Lego
 
I think I've discovered another law of physics! Have you ever noticed that a piece of falling Lego will always end up in the most difficult spot to see and/or reach!! I firmly believe that we are dealing with some sort of artificial intelligence (...) (25 years ago, 25-Jan-00, to lugnet.castle)  

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