little math puzzle. False positives - Printable Version +- HP Forums (https://www.hpmuseum.org/forum) +-- Forum: HP Calculators (and very old HP Computers) (/forum-3.html) +--- Forum: General Forum (/forum-4.html) +--- Thread: little math puzzle. False positives (/thread-10727.html) |
little math puzzle. False positives - pier4r - 05-11-2018 11:07 AM Mining unobtainium is hard work – the rare mineral appears in only 1% of rocks in the mine. But your friend Tricky Joe has something up his sleeve. The unobtainium detector he’s been perfecting for months is finally ready. The unobtanium detector reports 100% success if the mineral is contained in the rock. Otherwise it says with a reliability of 90% that the rock is a dummy. Once found a rock that is reported as positive using the detector, you get outside the mine. Tricky Joe says "look, I don't want to go selling this thing and get 50% of the revenue. If you want I get only 200$ and then you can sell it to the market for its price (1000$)". Do you accept the deal? Solution: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1csFTDXXULY Also brilliant.org is doing a quite nice aggressive marketing, it is a pity that they collect tons of nice problems (and tons of spam) but as every modern social network focused on "now" it is impossible to find a list of them. Either one has a lot of patience to scroll the list, or the available problems are only the last ones. And once again plenty of interesting contributions are practically lost. RE: little math puzzle. False positives - grsbanks - 05-11-2018 12:21 PM (05-11-2018 11:07 AM)pier4r Wrote: [...] but as every modern social network focused on "now" it is impossible to find a list of them. If you want a stash of problems that are listed and archived then there's Project Euler. RE: little math puzzle. False positives - pier4r - 05-11-2018 01:24 PM Thanks! Nonetheless I always like collection of problems coming from this or that community. Brilliant has a lot of potential, ideally. |