A gallery in NY…
They seem to be displaying and selling replicas of the Lament Configuration from Hellraiser. Also similar, inspired cubes. Pretty cool!Web link of note: Pyramid Gallery
(At http://www.pyramid-gallery.com/)
Science, Mad. And some movies.
A gallery in NY…
They seem to be displaying and selling replicas of the Lament Configuration from Hellraiser. Also similar, inspired cubes. Pretty cool!This week I had a design idea for modifying a standard Rubik’s Cube to match a different color scheme- just take off the old stickers and replace them with new ones. My idea has to do with the difference between “color” and “hue” and the subtle differences the eye can distinguish.
While surfing on how to do this (laminating, etc), I stumbled onto a huge number of cubing sites, not just “speedcubing” (solving the cube very very fast), which is impressive but way too dorky for me, but also modifying the cube into different shapes.
Suddenly I am really interested in my Rubik’s Cube… I drove to my mom’s house to fish my old cube out of her garage.
I visited the Rubik’s site– they sell the originals-
and the larger versions which had been discontinued for so long or previously only manufactured by hobbyists-
But- they also had some blank cubes! Perfect for design projects. Some kits are sold with the stickers, some are even “joke cubes” that have stickers to make every side identical.
If you’re a real psycho they also have kits for the Rubik’s Magic. I hope you like playing with lots and lots of fishing line! The kits are so complex they come with a CD-ROM of instruction videos.
One variant I found really interesting was the “Siamese cubes”- two or more cubes that share cubies. I have seen Siamese cubes which share three cubies, and even one that was kind of a joke in which the cubes share 18 cubies.
There are the Fusion Cubes,
I’m seeing a lot of 4 and 5 cubies on a side… and although someone mentions he is working on a 6x6x6, no one seems to have one. I wonder why that is?
Some of the modifed cubes are just normal cubes with crap glued onto them- like most of the 5x3x3 cubes. I think that’s just cheesey.
I’m also very curious what the Electronic Cube would have done… it was patented by Rubik but never released.
Also in the box in my mom’s garage were all my other twisty puzzles- the Skewb, the Square One, and the dreaded Professor’s Cube, with most of its stickers falling off. I never did solve that one…
I couldn’t find my cuboctahedron cube (works the same as the basic 3x3x3 but looks more complicated), and I also found the Pyraminx which I’ve never used because it just isn’t very interesting… somewhere I had an Alexander’s Star, which also was never that interesting to me.
It’s hard to say what the difference is; they are all the same kind of puzzle. The MegaMinx doesn’t look that interesting, but the Ultimate Skewb does… Similarly, I like the Bandaged Cube, but I don’t know that I’d actually play with it… it’s a vague aesthetic.
Links:
People modify their rubik’s cubes and summon demons with them.
They are testing the fire alarms here… while we are still in the building.
Literally every five minutes, at totally random intervals, the alarm will let out a shrill CHEEEP CHEEEP and then fall silent. Occaisionally if we are very lucky the power cycles as well and everyone’s UPS under their desk clicks a few times. I’m sure this is some demented social experiment to see what it takes to make us go on a killing spree. Or maybe just how devoted to our work we are… Of course since I’m blogging I guess I failed that test.