Micro Softy 71: Strange Economics
A numbers' game at the hardware storeGreat nerds are able to grasp deeper meanings. So here is this week’s Micro Softy about an overheard conversation.
Bill walks into Home Depot looking to buy something for his home.
He asks the clerk in charge, “How much for one?”
“Sixty cents,” the clerk replies.
“Okay, how about 11?”
“That’d be a dollar twenty.”
“Great,” Bill says. “I’ll take 101.”
“That’ll be a dollar eighty,” the clerk answers.
So, here’s this week’s Micro Softy. What was Bill buying?
Solution to Micro Softy 70: The Light Above Your Stairs
Last week’s puzzle asks: how does a two-way switch control the light on the stairs? There is a switch downstairs and one upstairs. If the light is on, flip either switch and the light turns off. If the light is off, flip either switch and the light is turned on.
To see how this works, look at the figure. The two switches used are called “single throw – double pole.” One switch is upstairs (marked U) and the other downstairs (marked D). As shown, both switches are in the up position and there is a complete circuit and the light is on. Flip either switch, the circuit is not completed and the light goes off. Flip either switch again completes a circuit and the light goes on again.

This is simple and elegant. Nerds will notice this switching is equivalent to an exclusive or (XOR) logic operation.
Things get a lot more complicated when three or more switches are used to turn a light off or on.
The Monday Micro Softy is a weekly feature of Mind Matters News. Here are the links to all the puzzles and answers to date:
Monday Micro Softy 70: The light above your stairs involved the Switching Theory and how a two-way switch works. If the stair light is on, flip the downstairs switch and the light goes on/off. A flip of the upstairs switch does the same thing. If the light is off, flipping either switch turns the light on. What’s a simple circuit that does this? You can find puzzles 55 through 70 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 69: A Bunch of Switches involved knowledge of Switching Theory. Last week, Frenchy and the other prisoners at Pokey Nook Prison flipped a switch each day for 101 days, On the 102nd day, Frenchy announced with certainty the 101st prisoner had arrived. How did he know? You can find puzzles 55 through 69 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 68: An Overcrowded Prison featured Frenchy and the other prisoners at Pokey Nook Prison, who flipped a switch each day for 101 days. On the 102nd day, Frenchy announced with certainty the 101st prisoner had arrived. How did he know? You can find puzzles 55 through 68 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 67: Three Switches and a Song was about switching theory. Wide Clyde wants to go upstairs to cook some Top Raman noodles. To do that, he needs to identify which of three switches controls the hot plate upstairs. The hot plate is plugged in but currently off. The other two switches turn outside lights off and on. Wide Clyde can’t see outside, so he can’t determine which switches control the lights. How can Wide Clyde determine which switch controls the hot plate with just one trip upstairs? You can find puzzles 55 through 67 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 66: Reducing Repetitive Repetition requires being BFF’s with numbers, and last week’s Micro Softy was tough and mathy. Here is the solution: Any three-digit number multiplied by 1001 duplicates the number. For example, 214 x 1001 = 214,214. And 13 x 11 x 7 = 1001. So dividing the big number by 13, then 11 and then 7 is the same as dividing by 1001. The original three-digit number always results!
Monday Micro Softy 65: Fathers and sons was about two fathers and their two sons who walked into a Bass Pro Shop in Memphis, Tennessee. Each man bought an AK47 rifle with ammunition and a 75-round drum magazine. But all together, only three AK47’s were sold. How could this be? The solution is there were altogether two fathers (father and grandfather) and two sons (the father and his son) but only three men. You can find puzzles 55 through 65 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 64: Old Time Phishing was about an investment banker, Geardown Geko, who received anonymous tips forecasting the outcome of future events starting in 1948. The solution is: The winner of Tipper’s phishing lottery. It was a type of phishing where in the end there was a single winner participant, Geko. Someone had to win. Everyone else who bet on the predictions eventually was a loser. You can find puzzles 55 through 64 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 63: A Beggar’s Tale. Exceptional nerds are psychologists who see through surface actions. Such a skill is required to solve this Micro Softy. The solution to Freaky Bob’s strategy is: If he had taken the $10, he’d have lost repeat customers. Nobody would’ve been entertained. Choosing the $5 kept people coming back with more cash, proving far more lucrative for him in the long run. You can find puzzles 55 through 63 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 62: The Ordeal of Sisyphus Fats. The best computer programmers and engineers must be good at scheduling. Last week’s Micro Softy tests this ability and the solution is that Sisyphus Fats took 98 minutes to push the large bowing ball to the top of the 100-foot hill. You can find puzzles 55 through 62 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 61: Micro Softy Take Five was more of a trivia question than it was a puzzle. To solve Micro Softy 61, the answer is the theme for the Mission Impossible movie franchise starring Tom Cruz. You can find puzzles 55 through 61 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 60: Here’s a puzzle from Gunsmoke Told to “get out of Dodge”after a shooting, a gunslinger does so at a nearly inexplicable time. Can you solve the puzzle?
To solve Microsofty 59, recall that direction of air flow is due to pressure — not size. Which tire is under more pressure? You can find puzzles 56 through 59 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 55: “It happens every spring.” Baseball, that is. Here’s a puzzle that takes in baseball’s summer. To solve last week’s puzzle, you don’t need to know the distance. Check the problem again for the number you do need to know. You can find puzzles 51 through 54 here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 50: Cutting through the cornbread. How did Yuri Senior cut the cornbread into eight identical portions using only three straight cuts? You can guess the answer to Microsofty 49 if you try the test question yourself at home, using a small mirror. Links to Microsofties 46 through 49 are here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 45: Can Tony beat the fast-food curfew? An early curfew on fast food service motivated a boy to exercise more vigorously. But how fast was he pedalling? To solve Micro Softy 44, recall that Tony doesn’t need to take the individual pills each day, only the prescribed amount of each. You will find links here to Micros Softies 41 through 44 as well.
Monday Micro Softy 40: The fate of a false prophet. He wasn’t actually fired for being a false prophet but for something that his prophecy unintentionally revealed. The solution to Micro Softy 39 lies in considering an alternative possible meaning of a word commonly used in sports. You will also find links to Micro Softies 30 through 39 and their answers here as well.
Monday Micro Softy 29: A funeral lament in four lines. The funeral director was puzzled by Dan’s description of his relationship to the deceased but there was no question that his grief was sincere Here, you will also find links to Microsofties 22 through 29.
Monday Micro Softy 21: Finding More of the Deadly Fentanyl Pills. Here, you will also find links to Microsofties 11 through 20 as well.
Monday Micro Softy 11: What Happened to That Other Dollar? Here you will find links to the first ten Micro Softies. Have fun!
