Quote:
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Originally Posted by Pat McCarthy
While wearing Amethyst colored glasses, John Neun gave George Burns the following riddle: "Look closely and you will see something between Pi, You and Me."
While reading the hint, I noticed something in the way the comma was used.
Normally, when referring to three items in a list, the writer would write it as such, " Pi, You, and Me" With another comma separating You + and.
But in the hint, the comma implies that the speaker is saying that "You and Me" (John Neun and George Burns) will see something between Pi.
I have no clue if that made much sense to anyone else, but that's another thing I got out of this hint.
There must be some significance in that.
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How I read it, George Burns would see something between pi. And that something would be "You and Me," ie. George Burns and John Neun. It would go along with the simulated universe talked about in the previous quote, the FLL challenge (which has, historically, had a bit of a relation to the FIRST game), and that "...the center is out" quote mentioned in an earlier thread. I mean, wasn't there a CD involved with the FLL No Limits challenge?
While wearing Amethyst colored glasses, John Neun gave George Burns the following riddle:
"Look closely and you will see
something between Pi,
You and Me."