Recommended Posts

sorry just seen that after i posted tried to edit

Well I think the latest photo seals it for one that mentioned George Stephenson [http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blrailroad7.htm]

It just seemed that Glenn Seaborg was just not quite right based on the other inventions listed.

From Inventors Hall of Fame

It shows that the Reaper was patented in 1834

Cyrus McCormick of Virginia was responsible for liberating farm workers from hours of back-breaking labor by introducing the farmers to his newly invented mechanical reaper in July, 1831. By 1847, Cyrus McCormick began the mass manufacture of his reaper in a Chicago factory.

Try replacing JW with 1722 for pulsation engine by John Whitehurst

After the dialog and pictures found of the Wachs I'd go back to James Watt for JW

I believe the intention was to point to the steam machine but they screwed up

with the picture.

Year ? the wiki says that he had a working engine in 1765.

i tried putting the initials in chronological order of when the inventor invented the device.

BF (1752)

JW (1763)

GLL (1774)

HD (1806)

CM (1809)

GS (1814)

LP (1862)

TE (1877)

AGB (1880)

GM (1901)

but when i put the initials in the answer box in that order with only a space between each, i had no luck.

Edit: forgot one. going to include it and see if i can work something out. : \

If we add up the time between the dates is there any pattern? If so, we could extend (or prepend?) the pattern to a date before or after and see if there's an invention on that date... Maybe that's the answer?

After the dialog and pictures found of the Wachs I'd go back to James Watt for JW

I believe the intention was to point to the steam machine but they screwed up

with the picture.

Year ? the wiki says that he had a working engine in 1765.

I think they hosed the entire Mural puzzle... There are multiple dates that could be used for a few of them too. For example, do they mean Marconi's first transmission, his first experiment, his first trans-Atlantic transmission, his patent dates, his... wait... if this is all about vanishing maybe it's the dates all the inventors died! :)

By averaging the dates of the inventors I get 1822.67 . In mid-1822 Charles Babbage invented the Difference Engine.

I think 1822.52 is within a margin of error, given over the last several posts we've been fiddling a year here, a year there.

Still don't know what the actual answer is though.

I don't believe we'll find exact records of the years for each couple of inventions and

we may be waisting effort like the tomb puzzle trying to figure something from the

numbers besides that they are all contemporary, most of them created their

inventions in the 19th century and many of the inventions contributed to the

industrial revolution.

The problem is that what we are supposed to provide as an answer, a missing

inventor ? a commonality between all them ? the effects or their inventions ?

I don't think we'll get anywhere with the years, besides to validate that they are

from the same generation.

Hmmm "name plates on each door" and "don't forget the baseboards" sounds

familiar ?

My .02

Out of all these inventors, only 1 was awarded the Nobel prize for physics, and it was not him alone. it was jointly awarded to GUGLIELMO MARCONI and CARL FERDINAND BRAUN in recognition of their contributions to the development of wireless telegraphy.

not sure yet if this might pertain to the answer, but I am still looking.

I don't believe we'll find exact records of the years for each couple of inventions and

we may be waisting effort like the tomb puzzle trying to figure something from the

numbers besides that they are all contemporary, most of them created their

inventions in the 19th century and many of the inventions contributed to the

industrial revolution.

The problem is that what we are supposed to provide as an answer, a missing

inventor ? a commonality between all them ? the effects or their inventions ?

I don't think we'll get anywhere with the years, besides to validate that they are

from the same generation.

Hmmm "name plates on each door" and "don't forget the baseboards" sounds

familiar ?

My .02

Maybe this will help: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_invention

Out of all these inventors, only 1 was awarded the Nobel prize for physics, and it was not him alone. it was jointly awarded to GUGLIELMO MARCONI and CARL FERDINAND BRAUN in recognition of their contributions to the development of wireless telegraphy.

not sure yet if this might pertain to the answer, but I am still looking.

And for a couple of them was difficult to affirm who really invented the thing first.

And for a couple of them was difficult to affirm who really invented the thing first.

I was thinking lasting effect meant the one that was useful. e.g.: Tesla may have discovered radio transmission, but he didn't see the use in it. Marconi perfected it for communications...

I don't believe we'll find exact records of the years for each couple of inventions and

we may be waisting effort like the tomb puzzle trying to figure something from the

numbers besides that they are all contemporary, most of them created their

inventions in the 19th century and many of the inventions contributed to the

industrial revolution.

The problem is that what we are supposed to provide as an answer, a missing

inventor ? a commonality between all them ? the effects or their inventions ?

I don't think we'll get anywhere with the years, besides to validate that they are

from the same generation.

Hmmm "name plates on each door" and "don't forget the baseboards" sounds

familiar ?

My .02

I tend to agree with you. The only other thing in the mural that we haven't addressed is the backdrop in the mural itsself. In the early pitctures it is of clouds and sky. The farter to the right you scan we begin to see stars and space. Should we be looking for the inventors of flight?

I may be thinking in the wrong direction, but looking at the name of the puzzle Mural, the phrase People And Dates With Lasting Effect, & the fact that the picture moves. I was thinking in the direction of Motion Picture. I could not get anything to work so far, but it is just a thought.

I tend to agree with you. The only other thing in the mural that we haven't addressed is the backdrop in the mural itsself. In the early pitctures it is of clouds and sky. The farter to the right you scan we begin to see stars and space. Should we be looking for the inventors of flight?

I thought about that as well. I tried Goddard (rocketry) and Wright (airplane)...

I tend to agree with you. The only other thing in the mural that we haven't addressed is the backdrop in the mural itsself. In the early pitctures it is of clouds and sky. The farter to the right you scan we begin to see stars and space. Should we be looking for the inventors of flight?

Hehe, when I saw the clouds changing color, since it's seems that the pictures of the inventions are in

chronological order I tried with "Pollution" but didn't work :-)

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Here is the new Surface Laptop Ultra wallpaper in high resolution by Taras Buria Earlier this week, Microsoft announced the Surface Laptop Ultra, its brand-new high-end laptop powered by NVIDIA's brand-new RTX Spark processor. As usual, Microsoft gives each new device a unique wallpaper, and the Surface Laptop Ultra is no exception. While the device is not publicly available yet, somebody has already extracted its wallpaper, giving everyone a chance to get a piece of the upcoming laptop in its full-resolution glory. The Surface Laptop Ultra has a very dark, abstract wallpaper that resembles the stock wallpapers in Windows Server, albeit with much less color. Having this dark, grim wallpaper highlights the laptop's mini-LED display and its ability to cut off parts of the screen's backlight to achieve OLED-like black levels. However, if you also like light wallpapers, we made a white version by simply inverting its colors. You can download both wallpapers below (click the image, right-click it, and select "Save as"): The Surface Laptop Ultra is expected to launch later this year. Microsoft is not revealing full details yet, including the price. However, Microsoft confirmed up to 1 petaflop of AI performance and RTX 5070-level of GPU performance. The heart of the laptop has up to 20 CPU cores and 6,144 GPU cores. Additionally, Microsoft and NVIDIA boast high CPU efficiency for all-day battery life. As for the display, it is a 15-inch mini-LED display with a pixel density of 262 ppi and a maximum brightness of 2,000 nits. Of course, not everyone needs this amount of power, and certainly not everyone can afford it. For those who need a more affordable device, Microsoft is also preparing the next-generation Surface Pro powered by the Snapdragon X2 Elite processor. Weeks ahead of the announcement, details about this computer were leaked by a retailer. Do you like the Surface Laptop Ultra's stock wallpaper? Share your thoughts in the comments. Image provided by @nextgenos2026 on X
    • From all that I've read on the subject--not that much, really--it looks to me like companies and parents are trying to protect themselves from children using their parents accounts to run up giant bills, sometimes in the thousands of dollars, and the first the parents know about it is when they get sued... Internet companies have been sued for tailoring their ads to children, which is kind of old news. My belief is that policing starts at home with the parents, and the reason that so many laws that can't be enforced are being passed is because parents are eschewing their responsibilities, claiming not enough time, not enough knowledge, etc. Giving kids cell phones sans Internet connectivity is a good place to start--confine Internet activity to PCs in the home that the parents regulate. My kids are all grown and gone, I'm happy to say... They have their own kids to worry about.
    • ChartNet’s 1.7 million synthetic samples let compact open-source models outperform GPT-4o on every chart task   A team from MIT and the MIT-IBM Computing Research Lab has built a training dataset that solves one of the most persistent gaps in enterprise AI: the inability of even the best commercial models to reliably read a chart...... https://www.techtimes.com/articles/317752/20260604/ai-chart-understanding-breakthrough-mit-ibm-dataset-lets-small-models-beat-gpt-4o.htm  
    • BTW DXVK is also available on Windows and offers similar benefits like on Linux when it comes to performance, at least in some titles. The Raceroom racing sim for example even offers DXVK as one of its officially supported options and it can achieve ridiculous improvements in certain situations, like quite literally doubling (or more) the framerates
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      nothanks earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      jefred earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Apprentice
      JoeyNeo went up a rank
      Apprentice
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      476
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      233
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      68
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      58
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!