Rubik's cubes that is,
image
credit: Steren Giannini, it was in 1974, that Ernő Rubik built the first
Rubik's cube not as a toy, but as a tool to model three-dimensional movement.
The colors were to designate that movement, and only afterward did he discover
it was also a puzzle.
After creating the cube, he
explained, he was faced with a second challenge: how to solve it. At the time,
he had no idea if his cube could even be put back into place, let alone how
fast — and it took him a full month to solve his own puzzle. It was fiendishly
difficult “to find your way back, or to find your target — just to solve it as
a combinatorical problem,” he said. “And I was without any background for that,
because I was the first who tried.”
The
popularity of the puzzle surprised Rubik, and so did its longevity. He assumed
it would only be interesting to those with science or engineering backgrounds.
Yet here we are 46 years later, and Rubik's cubes still sell like hotcakes.
Rubik's new book, Cubed: The Puzzle of Us All, is not so much about the cube
itself, but about how people all over the world took it to heart, and for a video interview with the great man himself, click this link that will take you to UNDARK, where you can read more of the cube and the man himself, fascinating.
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