Boiledbeans

Drama! Intrigue!! Geekiness!!!

Quiz

Category: Quiz

Add an e

—srikanth @ August 12, 2012

Simple - connect:

Cracked by: Jayaprakash B R, Sumanth Patlolla, Manish Achuth, Supritha Maiya, KK, Rogi and Ananth

Show Answer

(2) was named after the nobel laureate Charles Hard Townes (1)


10 kilotons?

—srikanth @ August 11, 2012

This is the wolframalpha solution to a question. That question is representative of a particular style of questions. What are the style of questions called?

Cracked by: Sumanth Patlolla, Manish Achuth and Mo

Show Answer

Fermi Problems - this specifically is “How many Piano Tuners are there in Chicago”. Fermi’s approximation was 125. WA has 250 based on actual data.


Also the latest hat

—srikanth @ August 10, 2012

What is the man in the lab coat holding? WTF is it all about?

Cracked by: Sumanth Patlolla, KK, Supritha Maiya, Manish Achuth, Rogi and Ananth

Show Answer

A spherical cow of uniform density - a parody animal that’s frequently used to point out how ridiculous the “assumptions” underlying physics work are.


Having an affair?

—srikanth @ August 9, 2012

Who wrote this paper, and what was special about it?

Transgressing the Boundaries: Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity
There are many natural scientists, and especially physicists, who continue to reject the notion that the disciplines concerned with social and cultural criticism can have anything to contribute, except perhaps peripherally, to their research. Still less are they receptive to the idea that the very foundations of their worldview must be revised or rebuilt in the light of such criticism. Rather, they cling to the dogma imposed by the long post-Enlightenment hegemony over the Western intellectual outlook, which can be summarized briefly as follows: that there exists an external world, whose properties are independent of any individual human being and indeed of humanity as a whole; that these properties are encoded in eternal'' physical laws; and that human beings can obtain reliable, albeit imperfect and tentative, knowledge of these laws by hewing to the objective’’ procedures and epistemological strictures prescribed by the (so-called) scientific method.

Cracked by: Jayaprakash B R, Sumanth Patlolla, Supritha Maiya, KK, Manish Achuth, Rogi, Logik, Ananth, Amarendra Kumar and anirban


Calling Doc Ock

—srikanth @ August 8, 2012

What famous problem does this try to describe?

Cracked by: KK, Sumanth Patlolla, Manish Achuth, Supritha Maiya, Amarendra Kumar, Rogi, Siddarth Pai, Kaustubh Mhatre, Ananth, debjani and hitchhiker

Show Answer

The Multi-Armed Bandit


Cat got your tongue?

—srikanth @ August 7, 2012

Identify/connect to the brain:

Cracked by: KK, Sumanth Patlolla and Manish Achuth

Show Answer

Paul Broca and Carl Wernicke - discovered the major speech centers of the human brain


Ctrl-c/Ctrl-v

—srikanth @ August 6, 2012

What specific term was used to describe images such as these? The 3 below are representative (perhaps even iconic) of the term, but by no means an exhaustive collection.

Cracked by: Sumanth Patlolla, Supritha Maiya, Rogi, Siddarth Pai, Ananth and Manish Achuth

Show Answer

Composographs


beautiful soup

—srikanth @ August 5, 2012

Identify the art installation.

Cracked by: Supritha Maiya, KK and Manish Achuth

Show Answer

Movable type, at the NY times.


im in ur base

—srikanth @ August 4, 2012

Identify the company whose technology is being demonstrated here

Cracked by: Sumanth Patlolla, Rogi, Supritha Maiya, KK and Siddarth Pai

Show Answer

BrainGate - a sensor implanted in the brain being used to control a robot arm.


Lost in translation

—srikanth @ August 3, 2012

The Sun, The Moon, The Southern Cross, and The Evening Star.

What?

Cracked by: Sumanth Patlolla, Rogi, Supritha Maiya, Kaustubh Mhatre, Ananth, Manish Achuth, KK, Siddarth Pai and mankuTimma

Show Answer

VLT - the Very Large Telescope in Chile