seedmagazine.com— A scientist working an an algorithm to help develop images for microscopy accidentally found a universal solution to the Japanese brainteaser.
Mar 8, 2006View in Crawl 4
uh...reported as lame...the algorithm isn't even there, and how is that news worthy when there are billions of sudoku solvers already? I even have a Sudoku solver/game on my cellphone that already solves all sudoku puzzles. $5.99 with Sprint minus $5 credit for having vision = a mobile sudoku solver/game for $0.99 plus tax.
lefrenzyMar 9, 2006
good to hear. I'm sick of moving that sudoku display we have at our bookstore everywhere...
strawberryfrogMar 9, 2006
A "true" Sudoku solver algorithm gives the right answer quickly. Period. Brute force does so in under a second.
ikbotMar 9, 2006
Yah, I found one too. It's called iterative deepening, and it is decades old :-D
tidejweMar 11, 2006
uh...reported as lame...the algorithm isn't even there, and how is that news worthy when there are billions of sudoku solvers already? I even have a Sudoku solver/game on my cellphone that already solves all sudoku puzzles. $5.99 with Sprint minus $5 credit for having vision = a mobile sudoku solver/game for $0.99 plus tax.
valrusApr 23, 2006
To steal a quote from StrawberryFrog: "Sudoku is computer generated and computer-solvable. I see no reason to put humans in the loop."
jyowsaFeb 25, 2007
This is a f_king disaster. Who's gonna wanna play Sudoku again now?