Archive for August, 2010



How do Sudoku setters set Sudokus?

Saturday 28 August 2010 @ 12:58 pm
daily sudoku
cb asked:

It must be computer generated. But some are cleverer than others (and make more money at it – eg the guy in The Daily Telegraph). Is it simply the reverse of solving a sudoku, encoded? (Fiendish is no problem with logic.) Or is it more sophisticated than that?




What do you think? I think it’s great?

Wednesday 25 August 2010 @ 5:53 am
daily sudoku
sealRborders asked:

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Some border towns begin strict enforcement of immigration laws

Standing in a cramped federal courtroom in Del Rio, Texas last month, illegal immigrant Walter Oscar Portillo-Machado pleaded with a judge for mercy. But he came to the wrong place for that.

The Salvadoran man was caught along a 210-mile stretch of the Texas-Mexico border that has been set up as zero-tolerance zone for illegal immigration. Instead of merely getting sent back home, immigrants here are arrested, prosecuted, and sometimes sentenced to prison before they are formally kicked out of the country.

The effort began late last year along a border area that includes the Rio Grande border towns of Del Rio and Eagle Pass. It has been hailed by federal officials as a creative use of local and federal resources to tighten the border.

While other border sectors avoided strict enforcement because they did not have enough jail space or prosecutors, authorities in the Del Rio area found bed space elsewhere in the region, assigned federal agents to help prosecute cases and began running illegal immigrants through a courtroom at a rate of one case per minute.

Immigration advocates have criticized the practice, saying it only moves the problem elsewhere along the border and may sacrifice civil liberties for the sake of efficiency.

“There’s nothing we’re doing that wasn’t already on the books,” said Hilario Leal Jr., a supervisory Border Patrol agent in the Del Rio sector. “It’s nothing new. We just started enforcing the law.”

The Del Rio sector also ended the widespread practice of “catch-and-release” that freed most non-Mexican immigrants with a piece of paper ordering them to show up in federal immigration court a month later — and almost no one did.

Most Mexican citizens with no criminal record who cross outside the Del Rio sector are still escorted back shortly after their arrest. Those from other countries are held in a detention center — not as criminals serving time — while the paperwork is being completed to return them to their home countries.

But in the Del Rio sector, every adult illegal immigrant, regardless of their home country, is criminally prosecuted and removed from the country after they have served his sentence.

“They know if they come (to Del Rio) they are going home, they are going to jail,” Leal said.

Before the effort began, illegal immigrants came across the river near Del Rio in droves, with Central and South American citizens often surrendering to agents because they knew they would be let go — after receiving food, water, medical care and sometimes a ride to a bus station, along with their notice to appear in court.

In recent years, the situation had become so hectic that Del Rio sector agents were lucky if they patrolled the border for two hours during an eight or 10-hour shift, Agent Cynthia Bilyk said. The rest of their time was spent processing the immigrants.

Agents in the sector were averaging about 500 arrests a day, Leal said. Now there are fewer than 100 daily arrests, and the reforms are credited with reducing arrests by about 29 percent so far this fiscal year.

While the changes have curbed arrests, freed up agents and other resources, they have not slowed the traffic at the federal courthouse.

The day Portillo-Machado stood shackled and handcuffed in the courtroom, he was surrounded by more than 30 defendants facing the same charge. The judge handled about one guilty plea a minute.

When his name was called, Portillo-Machado said “Cupable,” which means guilty in Spanish. He then asked the judge for forgiveness and was later sentenced to 120 days in jail.

Court staff said the day’s docket was light in comparison with the average crowd of would-be immigrants that often overflows the courtroom.

Magistrate Judge Dennis Green said the cases are heard quickly, but each defendant meets with a court-appointed lawyer before going to court. If there is any question about an immigrant’s potential defense, that person’s case is heard separately, the judge said.

The federal court’s two Del Rio magistrate judges are hearing about 2,100 cases a month. Their counterparts farther from the border in West Texas are averaging about 140.

Opponents say the process just pushes the problem to other sectors.

“The border is like a balloon,” said El Paso immigration lawyer Felipe D.J. Millan. “If it expands in one area, guess what? It still comes in from another area.”

Millan also worries that the reforms in the Del Rio sector and a similar plan in southern New Mexico are simply backdoor efforts to criminalize immigrants.




I want to start SUDOKU Puzzle group of friends.Please join with me if possible?

Tuesday 24 August 2010 @ 12:04 am
daily sudoku
Raghavendra R asked:

I am working with SUDOKU puzzles daily for the past two years. I want form a group and exchange my puzzles and solving them with the group. If anybody is interested please contact me My mail id is vrvrao45@gmail.com




Looking for new puzzles?

Sunday 22 August 2010 @ 2:15 am
The Marla Singer asked:

I’ve been doing Sudoku, Crosswords, Word Finds, and pretty much any popular puzzle almost daily for the last 5 years. I’ve run into Slitherlinks, which I absolutely am addicted to! Does anyone know any other puzzles I can find to print off on the net?




Best Site for news around Chicago land?

Monday 16 August 2010 @ 10:23 pm
daily sudoku
rebbyshy1 asked:

sounds weird but i would rather read the paper but i had to cut back and that’s one of the first things that had to go ><

so anyone know the best place to read up on news and possibly have the same stuff in it like the daily cross word or sudoku puzzle?




is there anything i can do about my brain power?

Sunday 15 August 2010 @ 9:20 am
dutchmaverick71 asked:

um i do enough of crossword, sudoku, word search .they seem they arent enough to help ….the games on my nintendo ds that helps to jog my overall brain power…nothing seem to work ..i feel as if my brain power is going down and going away. i ve tried the supplements such as gingseng, ginko bibloa…im trying to figure this out… it still eludes me..

the factors could be contributing this…

working overnights – not seeing people this way.
stress?
lonliness?
food?
i m taking supplements as well they might affect -

abs and lean ? power for men vitamins , fish oil (omega) , l argentine, brain power (gingseng and ginko)… to name a few.

i do physical workouts but again , its only physical and not mental .
i do some reading but not as much as i did in the past. i think i have to read more of newspaper and get activetly involved with debates ..i could write too…but i need to perfect my writing through a class or something.

sometimes, i get this vague , i cant describe it accurately but i get this sensation where you feel some very low grade pain spots on my head ..sometimes in the back and some localized pain areas.. i wouldnt call em pain but what else i could describe …its weird they dont interfere with my daily routine…

is there something that can help ? boosters? food? will a mri help to determine and identify the source? i know i have a very complex electrochemical machine that runs and the last thing im worried about is losing my mind!

is there a rx that helps? i used to be on prozac before and it helped greatly …maybe its the neurotransmitter that needs some serious help? i dont know ? i used to be my witty self, have the right words to say ….i felt as if im completely gone zombie … helpp!! yes , im desperate …i couldnt bear the thought of losing oneself as i have my friend of mine who had lost himself…
i need my brain power back !!!

your feedback would be greatly appreciated!
my brain power needs help specifically ..deductive thinking, logic, common sense…..




can you explain [as simply as possible] the strategy that unlocks the most difficult sudoku? i always work out?

Friday 6 August 2010 @ 12:33 am
easy sudoku
Martel Sobieski asked:

the medium and easy ones, but i am always relying on an educated guess to complete the hardest ones, and its 50/50 whether i get them right or not.
what is the last piece of the jigsaw i’m not getting strategy-wise, that will enable me to complete all sudoku even the hardest ones?