Monday, April 30, 2018

Digest for rec.games.trivia@googlegroups.com - 21 updates in 6 topics

msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 29 11:16PM -0500

These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2018-02-26,
and should be interpreted accordingly.
 
On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
Please post all your answers to the newsgroup in a single followup,
based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
the correct answers in about 3 days.
 
All questions were written by members of Bill Psychs and are
used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have
been retyped and/or edited by me. For further information see
my 2017-09-25 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
 
 
** Game 6, Round 9 - Science - Development Economics
 
Here is a round on development economics and economists -- a
specialized subfield of the "dismal science".
 
1. This metric represents the income or wealth distribution
of a nation's residents, and is the most commonly used measure
of inequality. The value 0 expresses perfect equality; a 1 is
maximum inequality. Name the statistic.
 
2. Although it is frequently misrepresented, this economist proposed
a tax on foreign exchange transactions to cushion exchange-rate
fluctuations. At each exchange of a currency into another, a
small tax would be levied to dissuade speculators. This tax was
intended to help developing or smaller countries have greater
control over their economies without shutting their doors to
trade and international monetary markets. Name the economist.
 
3. Although used in many economics fields, in the context
of development economics this term refers to the concept that
developing countries may accelerate development by skipping
older, inferior technologies and industries (that are less
efficient, more polluting, etc.) and moving directly to more
advanced ones. Name the term.
 
4. The Economist publishes this informal index as a way of measuring
purchasing-power parity (PPP) between two currencies. The index
also provides a test of the extent to which market exchange
rates result in goods costing the same in different countries.
Name the index.
 
5. Although heavily criticized, this concept was once considered
sacrosanct in development economics. This hypothesis states
that as an economy develops, market forces first increase and
then decrease economic inequality. The idea being that as an
economy industrializes, an influx of cheap rural labour to the
cities holds down wages. Over time, human capital replaces
physical capital, and wages rise again. When inequality and
income per capita are graphed, the shape is an inverted U --
known as whose curve?
 
6. Winning the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1998,
this economist is renowned for his economic theories of famine.
His main argument is that famine occurs not only from a lack
of food but also from inequalities built into mechanisms for
distributing food. Name him.
 
7. This economist was highly influential in the former Soviet
Union's transition from central planning to a market-based
economy. His approach was referred to as "shock therapy"
by his detractors. Name him.
 
8. Winning the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2001,
this economist is a former chief economist of the World
Bank and a former chairman of the US President's Council of
Economic Advisors. He is best known for his critical views of
laissez-faire economics, austerity measures, and international
institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank. Name him.
 
9. In 2000, a Peruvian economist published "The Mystery of Capital:
Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else".
Still highly influential to this day, he argued that no nation
can have a strong market economy without strict property rights
and records of property ownership. Otherwise, the poor hold
huge sums of capital in the informal sector but cannot leverage
it because they have no rights or title to that capital.
Name this economist, who the Shining Path tried to assassinate
at least twice.
 
10. This composite statistic of life expectancy, education,
and per capita income indicators is used to rank countries into
four tiers. A country scores higher when the lifespan is higher,
the education level is higher, and the GDP per capita is higher.
This is published annually by the United Nations Development
Programme. Name the statistic.
 
 
** Game 6, Round 10 - Challenge Round - Kids' TV
 
In each case we'll describe a show, and you name it.
 
* A. Geography Shows
 
A1. An American TV show that became a regular series in 2000 and
aired on CBS until 2006. The series centers around a
7-year-old girl with a love of embarking on quests related
to an activity she wants to participate in or a place that
she wants to go. She is accompanied by her talking purple
backpack and a monkey companion named Boots.
 
A2. Developed in part as a response to a "National Geographic"
survey that showed just how poor Americans' geography skills
were, from 1991 to 1995 this show provided an entertaining
way to learn about geography. It had a game-show format,
in which each question was introduced with a clue that
contained cultural and geographic information delivered as
part of a sketch, making the show more than a competition.
 
 
* B. Science Shows
 
B1. This show is part of an American "edutainment" media
franchise that consists of a book series, a TV series, and
several video games, among other things. Each of the stories
within the franchise centers on the antics of a fictional
elementary school teacher, Ms. Frizzle, and her class.
They go on field trips to impossible locations, such as the
solar system, clouds, the past, and inside the human body.
 
B2. This American show aired originally from 1993 to 1998 and
consisted of hosted segments of science being taught
through on-site visits, skits, and interesting props.
Segments featured children doing science-based sketches
and experiments. The show also included "Soundtrack of
Science" segments, which were parody songs and music videos.
 
 
* C. Artsy Shows
 
C1. The original and best-known episodes of this Argentinian-
British series aired between 1990 and 2007. It was presented
by one of its creators, Neil Buchanan, who gave step-by-step
instructions for creating works of art using all sorts of
materials readily available to a child. As a sidekick
to the host, the Head was a puppet stone bust who would
humorously recap the steps needed to produce the last art
piece made -- then he would usually show his creation and
burst into tears because he'd gotten in hilariously wrong.
 
C2. This US show filmed 780 episodes from 1971 to 1977, and was
in reruns until 1985. It was intended as a follow-up show
for kids who aged out of "Sesame Street", and it contained
a more "mature" type of sketch humor to teach kids grammar
and reading skills.
 
 
* D. Entertaining Shows
 
D1. This Canadian variety show series, hosted by Bill Lawrence,
aired in various formats on Hamilton's CHCH-TV from
1957 to 1992. It featured children aged 12 or under,
demonstrating their talents in various performing arts.
Noted performers on the original series included Sheila
Copps reciting a poem, Deborah Cox as a singer, and Frank
Augustyn performing a gymnastics routine.
 
D2. This Canadian show featured "songs and stories and so much
more". The content of the shows was generally geared towards
education and creativity. Each week of episodes focused
on a single theme, with each weekday assigned a different
motif in which the theme was explored in different ways.
For example, Tuesdays were "Dress-Up Day", and the hosts
would use costumes to explore the theme.
 
 
* E. Canadian Shows
 
E1. This show, designed to provide viewers with exposure to
the French language, was produced by CBC Television and
ran from 1959-1973. It featured a female host with a mouse
puppet named Suzie who generally spoke English.
 
E2. This TVO production originally ran from 1978 to 1980.
Featuring a hobo clown, this show was also designed to teach
French to anglophone children. The host would introduce new
terms, which would then be used in a subsequent sketches
-- first a bilingual version, then a French-only version.
This last sketch was introduced using these words that still
make a generation shudder: "And now, here's the complete
sketch again."
 
 
* F. Miscellaneous Shows
 
F1. If you were a kid between 1975 and 1985, you probably got
most of your US civics instruction from this show, with
classics like "I'm Just a Bill". The original run of the
show also had episodes covering multiplication, grammar,
and science.
 
F2. This Canadian show, which ran from 1967 to 1996, aired
every weekday morning. The host would lead children
through a series of songs, stories, arts, crafts, and
imagination games. The show's original co-hosts were a
child and a dog who lived in a treehouse.
 
--
Mark Brader "There are three rules for writing the novel.
Toronto Unfortunately no one knows what they are."
msb@vex.net -- Maugham
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
Joshua Kreitzer <gromit82@hotmail.com>: Apr 30 05:25AM

msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in news:id6dnROnNuUNBXvHnZ2dnUU7-
> of a nation's residents, and is the most commonly used measure
> of inequality. The value 0 expresses perfect equality; a 1 is
> maximum inequality. Name the statistic.
 
GINI

> also provides a test of the extent to which market exchange
> rates result in goods costing the same in different countries.
> Name the index.
 
Big Mac index

> His main argument is that famine occurs not only from a lack
> of food but also from inequalities built into mechanisms for
> distributing food. Name him.
 
Sen

> Union's transition from central planning to a market-based
> economy. His approach was referred to as "shock therapy"
> by his detractors. Name him.
 
Friedman
 
> it because they have no rights or title to that capital.
> Name this economist, who the Shining Path tried to assassinate
> at least twice.
 
De Soto

> to an activity she wants to participate in or a place that
> she wants to go. She is accompanied by her talking purple
> backpack and a monkey companion named Boots.
 
"Dora the Explorer"

> in which each question was introduced with a clue that
> contained cultural and geographic information delivered as
> part of a sketch, making the show more than a competition.
 
"Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego"; "Where on Earth is Carmen
Sandiego"
 
> elementary school teacher, Ms. Frizzle, and her class.
> They go on field trips to impossible locations, such as the
> solar system, clouds, the past, and inside the human body.
 
"The Magic School Bus"
 
> for kids who aged out of "Sesame Street", and it contained
> a more "mature" type of sketch humor to teach kids grammar
> and reading skills.
 
"The Electric Company"

> classics like "I'm Just a Bill". The original run of the
> show also had episodes covering multiplication, grammar,
> and science.
 
"Schoolhouse Rock"
 
--
Joshua Kreitzer
gromit82@hotmail.com
Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se>: Apr 30 10:13AM +0200

> of a nation's residents, and is the most commonly used measure
> of inequality. The value 0 expresses perfect equality; a 1 is
> maximum inequality. Name the statistic.
 
Gini

> intended to help developing or smaller countries have greater
> control over their economies without shutting their doors to
> trade and international monetary markets. Name the economist.
 
Tobin

> laissez-faire economics, austerity measures, and international
> institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the
> World Bank. Name him.
 
Krugman
"Peter Smyth" <smythp@gmail.com>: Apr 30 09:21AM

Mark Brader wrote:
 
> intended to help developing or smaller countries have greater
> control over their economies without shutting their doors to
> trade and international monetary markets. Name the economist.
Tobin
> also provides a test of the extent to which market exchange
> rates result in goods costing the same in different countries.
> Name the index.
Big Mac Index
> to an activity she wants to participate in or a place that
> she wants to go. She is accompanied by her talking purple
> backpack and a monkey companion named Boots.
Dora the Explorer
> in which each question was introduced with a clue that
> contained cultural and geographic information delivered as
> part of a sketch, making the show more than a competition.
Where in the World is Carmen San Diego?
> elementary school teacher, Ms. Frizzle, and her class.
> They go on field trips to impossible locations, such as the
> solar system, clouds, the past, and inside the human body.
Magic School Bus
> Segments featured children doing science-based sketches
> and experiments. The show also included "Soundtrack of
> Science" segments, which were parody songs and music videos.
Bill Nye Science Guy
> humorously recap the steps needed to produce the last art
> piece made -- then he would usually show his creation and
> burst into tears because he'd gotten in hilariously wrong.
Art Attack
> through a series of songs, stories, arts, crafts, and
> imagination games. The show's original co-hosts were a
> child and a dog who lived in a treehouse.
 
 
Peter Smyth
"Peter Smyth" <smythp@gmail.com>: Apr 29 03:48PM

Mark Brader wrote:
 
> gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
> parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
> for Montenegro?
 
5.2
 
Peter Smyth
Bruce Bowler <bbowler@bigelow.org>: Apr 29 03:55PM

On Sat, 28 Apr 2018 21:11:28 -0500, Mark Brader wrote:
 
> gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
> parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
> for Montenegro?
 
4
swp <stephen.w.perry@gmail.com>: Apr 29 02:13PM -0700

On Saturday, April 28, 2018 at 10:11:34 PM UTC-4, Mark Brader wrote:
> gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
> parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
> for Montenegro?
 
0.75
 
swp
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 29 05:34PM -0700

On Sunday, April 29, 2018 at 12:11:34 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:
> gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
> parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
> for Montenegro?
 
7.77
 
cheers,
calvin
Joshua Kreitzer <gromit82@hotmail.com>: Apr 30 05:28AM

msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in news:M6-dndkPBOpNtHjHnZ2dnUU7-
> gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
> parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
> for Montenegro?
 
10
 
--
Joshua Kreitzer
gromit82@hotmail.com
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 29 11:15PM -0500

Mark Brader:
 
> Questions #1-2 are about games held in Canada. In each case,
> *name* either one of the two mascots shown.
 
> 1. A.
 
Miga, Quatchi (Vancouver, 2010).
 
> 2. I.
 
Hidy, Howdy (Calgary, 1988). (Not accepting Mukmuk, their designated
sidekick, or Sumi, the Paralympic mascot that year; neither is
illustrated.) 4 for Joshua.
 
> show off, also for no points, on each of questions #3-15 you can
> give the mascots' names as well).
 
> 3. B.
 
1994, Lillehammer. (Håkon, Kristin).
 
> 4. C.
 
1984, Sarajevo. (Vucko.)
 
> 5. D.
 
2014, Sochi. (Bely Mishka, Snow Leopard, Zaika). 2 for Joshua.
 
> 6. E (decoy).
 
1976, Montreal. (Amik.)
 
> 7. F.
 
1998, Nagano. (Sukki, Nokki, Lekki, and Tsukki. Collectively the
Snowlets, also an acrostic from their names.) 2 for Joshua.
 
> 8. G.
 
1976, Innsbruck. (Schneemann, i.e. Snowman.)
 
> 9. H (decoy).
 
2008, Beijing. (Beibei, Jingjing, Huanhuan, Yingying, Nini.
Collectively the Fuwa or Friendlies, and an acrostic from their
names is "Beijing welcomes you" in Chinese.)
 
> [Picture I was used in question #2, remember.]
 
> 10. J (decoy).
 
1972, Munich. (Waldi.)
 
> 11. K (decoy).
 
1980, Lake Placid. (Roni.)
 
> 12. L.
 
2002, Salt Lake City (Powder, Copper, and Coal -- also known as
Swifter, Higher, and Stronger.) 4 for Joshua.
 
> 13. M (decoy).
 
1996, Atlanta. (Izzy.) Joshua got this.
 
> 14. N.
 
2006, Turin. (Neve, Gliz.) 4 for Joshua.
 
> 15. O.
 
1992, Albertville. (Magique.)
 
 
> * Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
> Expand each acronym to what it stands for.
 
> 1. HTTP.
 
HyperText Transfer Protocol. 4 for Joshua, Erland, Peter, Dan Blum,
Jason, and Dan Tilque. 3 for Calvin.
 
> 2. USB.
 
Universal Serial Bus. 4 for Calvin, Peter, Dan Blum, and Dan Tilque.
3 for Joshua (the hard way) and Erland.
 
> 3. HDMI.
 
High Definition Multimedia Interface. (In the original game "High
Definition Media Interface" was accepted on protest as "close
enough", so I'm accepting it also.) 4 for Calvin, Erland, Peter,
and Dan Tilque.
 
> 4. GUI.
 
Graphical User Interface. (I reluctantly accepted "graphic" or
"graphics" for the first word.) 4 for everyone -- Joshua, Calvin,
Erland, Peter, Dan Blum, Jason, and Dan Tilque.
 
> 5. LAN.
 
Local-Area Network. 4 for everyone.
 
> 6. VPN.
 
Virtual Private Network. 4 for Joshua, Calvin, Erland, Peter,
and Dan Blum.
 
> 7. RFID.
 
Radio Frequency IDentification. ("Radio Frequency Identifier" and
Radio Frequency Identification Device" were accepted on protest
as "close enough" in the original game, so I'm conforming.)
4 for Joshua, Calvin, Peter, Dan Blum, and Dan Tilque.
 
> 8. NFC.
 
Near-Field Communication. 4 for Erland.
 
> 9. CPU.
 
Central Processing Unit. (I accepted "central processor unit".)
4 for everyone.
 
> 10. RAM.
 
Random-Access Memory. 4 for everyone.
 
 
Scores, if there are no errors:
 
GAME 6 ROUNDS-> 2 4 6 7 8 BEST
TOPICS-> Lit His Ent Spo Mis THREE
Dan Blum 40 15 20 0 32 92
Joshua Kreitzer 35 8 16 16 31 82
"Calvin" 28 4 8 0 35 71
Peter Smyth 8 0 16 0 36 60
Jason Kreitzer 16 4 8 0 20 44
Dan Tilque 4 8 0 0 32 44
Erland Sommarskog 4 -- -- 0 35 39
Pete Gayde 8 4 4 -- -- 16
Marc Dashevsky 16 -- -- -- -- 16
 
--
Mark Brader, Toronto | "Police Stop Slaying Suspect Look-alikes"
msb@vex.net | --Yakima, WA, Herald-Republic, 2001-08-26
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Apr 29 08:31PM

This is Rotating Quiz #291. Entries must be posted by Sunday,
May 6th, 2018 at 11 PM (Eastern Daylight Time).
 
Usual rules: no looking anything up, no discussion, etc. The winner
gets to create the next RQ.
 
Please post your answers to all questions in a single followup in the
newsgroup, quoting the questions and placing your answer below each
one. Only one answer is allowed per question.
 
If the answer to a question is a person's name the entire name as it
is usually given in English must be the answer, instead of the usual
rule where the surname only is acceptable. (Titles may be omitted
where applicable.)
 
There is a theme but it does not affect scoring. Each correct answer
is worth 2 points; I do not have any way in mind in which an answer
can be almost correct, but if one presents itself such an answer will
be worth 1 point.
 
In case of a tie, the first tiebreaker will be whoever scored the most
points on the hardest questions (defined post-facto as the ones which
the fewest people got any points on). Second tiebreaker will be
posting order.
 
1. This Chinese businessman was named Shao Renleng and also used the
name Shao Yifu but the required answer is the English name he used. He
founded and ran a large Hong Kong film studio and was cofounder of the
Hong Kong television company TVB. He donated money to fund thousands
of Chinese college buildings and also the [answer 1] Institute of
Chinese Affairs at Oxford and the [answer 1 surname] Prize for several
scientific fields.
 
2. This English author is today probably best known for his humorous
fictional travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
 
3. This is probably the best known of the Leeward Islands worldwide;
it's actually one large(ish) island surrounded by smaller islands and
a large barrier reef. It was a US military base during World War II
and is now a major tourist destination. It is particularly known for
tourist bungalows built over the water.
 
4. This English band fronted by Mark Hollis charted in the US with its
second, eponymous single. Other US-charting singles were "Life's What
You Make It," "Such a Shame," and "It's My Life." They disbanded in
1992.
 
5. This German resort town is primarily known for its springs, which
have been popular at least since the time of the later Roman
Empire. However, it also contains the largest concert house in Germany
and casinos such as the Kurhaus.
 
6. This cellist was born in France but has lived much of his life in
the US. He has won 18 Grammy awards and more other honors than I care
to summarize.
 
7. If you want to block off part of a landscape without obstructing
people's views you might dig a sloped ditch ending in a vertical wall,
like so:
 
--- -------
\ |
\|
 
What is this commonly called?
 
8. This maximum security prison is one of the best known in the
US. It's a New York state prison and is located north of New York City
on the Hudson River (possibly leading to the expression "being sent up
the river" for being sentenced to prison time).
 
9. This English novelist's surname was originally Hueffer but he
changed it after World War I due to its German sound. He is best known
for The Good Soldier and the series The Fifth Queen and Parade's End.
 
10. This comics character is a young reporter who goes on adventures
around the world (and occasionally off of it) accompanied by his dog
and a cast of colorful characters. Steven Spielberg directed an
animated movie based on some of his adventures.
 
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
Joe <joe@oxtedonline.com>: Apr 29 09:54PM +0100

On 2018-04-29 20:31:59 +0000, Dan Blum said:
 
> scientific fields.
 
> 2. This English author is today probably best known for his humorous
> fictional travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
 
Jerome K Jerome
 
> a large barrier reef. It was a US military base during World War II
> and is now a major tourist destination. It is particularly known for
> tourist bungalows built over the water.
 
Bora Bora
 
> second, eponymous single. Other US-charting singles were "Life's What
> You Make It," "Such a Shame," and "It's My Life." They disbanded in
> 1992.
 
Talk Talk
 
> have been popular at least since the time of the later Roman
> Empire. However, it also contains the largest concert house in Germany
> and casinos such as the Kurhaus.
 
Baden Baden
 
 
> 6. This cellist was born in France but has lived much of his life in
> the US. He has won 18 Grammy awards and more other honors than I care
> to summarize.
 
Yo Yo Ma
 
> \ |
> \|
 
> What is this commonly called?
 
Ha-Ha
 
> US. It's a New York state prison and is located north of New York City
> on the Hudson River (possibly leading to the expression "being sent up
> the river" for being sentenced to prison time).
 
Sing Sing
 
> around the world (and occasionally off of it) accompanied by his dog
> and a cast of colorful characters. Steven Spielberg directed an
> animated movie based on some of his adventures.
 
Tintin
 
--
"To err, as they say, is human. To forgive is divine. To err by
withholding your forgiveness until it's too late is to become divinely
fucked up."
― Jonathan Tropper, The Book of Joe
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 29 03:55PM -0500

Dan Blum:
> of Chinese college buildings and also the [answer 1] Institute of
> Chinese Affairs at Oxford and the [answer 1 surname] Prize for several
> scientific fields.
 
Ali Baba? (No, I don't believe it.)

> 2. This English author is today probably best known for his humorous
> fictional travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
 
Jerome K. Jerome.

> a large barrier reef. It was a US military base during World War II
> and is now a major tourist destination. It is particularly known for
> tourist bungalows built over the water.
 
Pago Pago? (Even though I thought it was in the south Pacific while the
Leeward Is. were in the Caribbean. And I hope it's not Bora Bora.)

> second, eponymous single. Other US-charting singles were "Life's What
> You Make It," "Such a Shame," and "It's My Life." They disbanded in
> 1992.
 
I give up. I give up.

> have been popular at least since the time of the later Roman
> Empire. However, it also contains the largest concert house in Germany
> and casinos such as the Kurhaus.
 
Baden-Baden.

> 6. This cellist was born in France but has lived much of his life in
> the US. He has won 18 Grammy awards and more other honors than I care
> to summarize.
 
Yo Yo Ma.

> \ |
> \|
 
> What is this commonly called?
 
Ha-ha.

> US. It's a New York state prison and is located north of New York City
> on the Hudson River (possibly leading to the expression "being sent up
> the river" for being sentenced to prison time).
 
Sing Sing.

> 9. This English novelist's surname was originally Hueffer but he
> changed it after World War I due to its German sound. He is best known
> for The Good Soldier and the series The Fifth Queen and Parade's End.
 
Ford Madox Ford.

> around the world (and occasionally off of it) accompanied by his dog
> and a cast of colorful characters. Steven Spielberg directed an
> animated movie based on some of his adventures.
 
Tintin.
--
Mark Brader "'... Fifty science-fiction magazines don't give
Toronto you half the naked women that a good issue of
msb@vex.net the Sunday Times does.'" --SPACE, James Michener
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
Joe <joe@oxtedonline.com>: Apr 29 10:09PM +0100

On 2018-04-29 20:55:56 +0000, Mark Brader said:
 
>> tourist bungalows built over the water.
 
> Pago Pago? (Even though I thought it was in the south Pacific while the
> Leeward Is. were in the Caribbean. And I hope it's not Bora Bora.)
 
That was the only double barrelled island name I could think of.
 
 
--
"To err, as they say, is human. To forgive is divine. To err by
withholding your forgiveness until it's too late is to become divinely
fucked up."
― Jonathan Tropper, The Book of Joe
Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se>: Apr 29 11:35PM +0200

> 2. This English author is today probably best known for his humorous
> fictional travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
 
Jermome K. Jerome

> a large barrier reef. It was a US military base during World War II
> and is now a major tourist destination. It is particularly known for
> tourist bungalows built over the water.
 
Bora Bora

> second, eponymous single. Other US-charting singles were "Life's What
> You Make It," "Such a Shame," and "It's My Life." They disbanded in
> 1992.
 
Talk Talk

> have been popular at least since the time of the later Roman
> Empire. However, it also contains the largest concert house in Germany
> and casinos such as the Kurhaus.
 
Baden Baden
 

> US. It's a New York state prison and is located north of New York City
> on the Hudson River (possibly leading to the expression "being sent up
> the river" for being sentenced to prison time).
 
Sing Sing

> around the world (and occasionally off of it) accompanied by his dog
> and a cast of colorful characters. Steven Spielberg directed an
> animated movie based on some of his adventures.
 
Tin-Tin
swp <stephen.w.perry@gmail.com>: Apr 29 02:36PM -0700

On Sunday, April 29, 2018 at 4:31:59 PM UTC-4, Dan Blum wrote:
> of Chinese college buildings and also the [answer 1] Institute of
> Chinese Affairs at Oxford and the [answer 1 surname] Prize for several
> scientific fields.
 
run run shaw
 
> 2. This English author is today probably best known for his humorous
> fictional travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
 
jerome jerome
 
> a large barrier reef. It was a US military base during World War II
> and is now a major tourist destination. It is particularly known for
> tourist bungalows built over the water.
 
bora bora
 
> second, eponymous single. Other US-charting singles were "Life's What
> You Make It," "Such a Shame," and "It's My Life." They disbanded in
> 1992.
 
talk talk
 
> have been popular at least since the time of the later Roman
> Empire. However, it also contains the largest concert house in Germany
> and casinos such as the Kurhaus.
 
baden baden
 
> 6. This cellist was born in France but has lived much of his life in
> the US. He has won 18 Grammy awards and more other honors than I care
> to summarize.
 
yo yo ma
 
> \ |
> \|
 
> What is this commonly called?
 
a ditch
 
> US. It's a New York state prison and is located north of New York City
> on the Hudson River (possibly leading to the expression "being sent up
> the river" for being sentenced to prison time).
 
sing sing
 
> 9. This English novelist's surname was originally Hueffer but he
> changed it after World War I due to its German sound. He is best known
> for The Good Soldier and the series The Fifth Queen and Parade's End.
 
ford ford
 
> around the world (and occasionally off of it) accompanied by his dog
> and a cast of colorful characters. Steven Spielberg directed an
> animated movie based on some of his adventures.
 
tin tin
 
swp
"Peter Smyth" <smythp@gmail.com>: Apr 29 10:08PM

Dan Blum wrote:
 
> scientific fields.
 
> 2. This English author is today probably best known for his humorous
> fictional travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
Jerome K Jerome
> second, eponymous single. Other US-charting singles were "Life's What
> You Make It," "Such a Shame," and "It's My Life." They disbanded in
> 1992.
Talk Talk
> have been popular at least since the time of the later Roman
> Empire. However, it also contains the largest concert house in Germany
> and casinos such as the Kurhaus.
Baden Baden
> 6. This cellist was born in France but has lived much of his life in
> the US. He has won 18 Grammy awards and more other honors than I care
> to summarize.
Yo Yo Ma
> US. It's a New York state prison and is located north of New York City
> on the Hudson River (possibly leading to the expression "being sent up
> the river" for being sentenced to prison time).
Sing Sing
> around the world (and occasionally off of it) accompanied by his dog
> and a cast of colorful characters. Steven Spielberg directed an
> animated movie based on some of his adventures.
Tintin
 
Peter Smyth
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 29 05:44PM -0700

On Monday, April 30, 2018 at 6:31:59 AM UTC+10, Dan Blum wrote:
> of Chinese college buildings and also the [answer 1] Institute of
> Chinese Affairs at Oxford and the [answer 1 surname] Prize for several
> scientific fields.
 
Li Li?
 
> 2. This English author is today probably best known for his humorous
> fictional travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
 
Jerome K Jerome
 
> a large barrier reef. It was a US military base during World War II
> and is now a major tourist destination. It is particularly known for
> tourist bungalows built over the water.
 
Bora Bora?
 
> second, eponymous single. Other US-charting singles were "Life's What
> You Make It," "Such a Shame," and "It's My Life." They disbanded in
> 1992.
 
The The?
 
> have been popular at least since the time of the later Roman
> Empire. However, it also contains the largest concert house in Germany
> and casinos such as the Kurhaus.
 
Baden Baden
 
> 6. This cellist was born in France but has lived much of his life in
> the US. He has won 18 Grammy awards and more other honors than I care
> to summarize.
 
Yau Yau?
 
> US. It's a New York state prison and is located north of New York City
> on the Hudson River (possibly leading to the expression "being sent up
> the river" for being sentenced to prison time).
 
Sing Sing
 
> 9. This English novelist's surname was originally Hueffer but he
> changed it after World War I due to its German sound. He is best known
> for The Good Soldier and the series The Fifth Queen and Parade's End.
 
Ford Madox Ford
 
> around the world (and occasionally off of it) accompanied by his dog
> and a cast of colorful characters. Steven Spielberg directed an
> animated movie based on some of his adventures.
 
Tin Tin
 
cheers,
calvin
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Apr 29 08:18PM -0700

Dan Blum wrote:
> scientific fields.
 
> 2. This English author is today probably best known for his humorous
> fictional travelogue Three Men in a Boat.
 
Jerome K. Jerome
 
> a large barrier reef. It was a US military base during World War II
> and is now a major tourist destination. It is particularly known for
> tourist bungalows built over the water.
 
Saint-Martin/Sint Maarten
 
> second, eponymous single. Other US-charting singles were "Life's What
> You Make It," "Such a Shame," and "It's My Life." They disbanded in
> 1992.
 
The The
 
> have been popular at least since the time of the later Roman
> Empire. However, it also contains the largest concert house in Germany
> and casinos such as the Kurhaus.
 
Baden-Baden
 
 
> 6. This cellist was born in France but has lived much of his life in
> the US. He has won 18 Grammy awards and more other honors than I care
> to summarize.
 
Yo Yo Ma
 
> \ |
> \|
 
> What is this commonly called?
 
ha-ha
 
> US. It's a New York state prison and is located north of New York City
> on the Hudson River (possibly leading to the expression "being sent up
> the river" for being sentenced to prison time).
 
Sing Sing
 
 
--
Dan Tilque
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 29 05:28PM -0700

Apologies for the errors. I must be out of practice.
 
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 Q10 TOTAL TB Quiz 516
1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 9 53 Mark Brader
1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 9 53 Gareth Owen
1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 8 47 Dan Blum
0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 6 37 Pete Gayde
0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 6 38 Peter Smyth
0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 5 35 Marc Dashevsky
0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 5 36 Dan Tilque
0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 4 29 Joe
0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 23 Erland S
- - - - - - - - - - --- ----------
3 5 7 7 5 2 9 3 6 8 55 61%
 
 
Gareth joins Mark on the podium.
 
cheers,
calvin
"Peter Smyth" <smythp@gmail.com>: Apr 29 03:44PM

Calvin wrote:
 
> 1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What three words does CSV stand for?
Comma Seperated Values
> 3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the title character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
> 4 Who designed the Banqueting House in London's Whitehall?
> 5 Those suffering from gout have elevated levels of which acid in the blood?
Uric
> 6 'Tea for the Tillerman' is a 1970 album by which British singer-songwriter?
Cat Stevens
> 7 Which element has the chemical symbol Hg?
Mercury
> 8 Which team sport features in the 1985 comedy film 'Teen Wolf'?
> 9 Clouds', 'Lysistrata' and 'The Frogs' are plays by which playwright (c. 446-386 BC)?
> 10 In which US state is the Air Force facility commonly known as Area 51 located?
Nevada
 
Peter Smyth
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Sunday, April 29, 2018

Digest for rec.games.trivia@googlegroups.com - 9 updates in 3 topics

msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 28 09:08PM -0500

Mark Brader:
> Here is another knockout contest, as originated in 2012 by the
> person posting as "Calvin". This one is on the theme of geography,
> and specifically, *comparisons* in geography.
 
I think I'll repeat the full rules, just one more time.

> are too small by a ratio of 0.2/0.05 = 4. If someone else said
> it is 0.6 times, they are too large by a ratio of 0.6/0.2 = 3.
> They scored better than you.
 
By the way, I was just using 0.2 as an example there, but on
looking up the areas I find that it's actually pretty close.
Manhattan actually is about 0.21 times that of Queens.
 
> There will be a few questions that will not ask for a ratio, and
> then the comparison with other answers may not use ratios. I will
> specify in that case.
 
One thing I neglected to talk about there is significant digits.
You will see below the numbers 4.15% and 27.87%. Because they are
given in the Factbook to only 3 and 4 significant digits respectively,
the result of computing 4.15%/27.87% cannot possibly be meaningful
to more than 3 significant digits.
 
However, for contest purposes *I am treating all numbers taken
from the Factbook and other named sources as if they were known to
be exact*. When I show the a "correct" answer, if it's a ratio I'll
report it to 7 significant digits.
 
 
> I think the 48-hour deadline is more likely to come first.)
 
> After the first round, this becomes a closed contest -- only those
> who have survived the earlier rounds may continue to enter.
 
It has now been 48 hours since Calvin's entry, so this contest is
closed to additional entrants. There were 10 entrants in Round 1,
so, barring surprises, there will be 9 rounds altogether.
 
> 1. According to the CIA World Factbook as of when this question
> was posted, the percentage of the population of Haiti who are
> over 65 is how many times the corresponding percentage for Japan?
 
Haiti 4.15%
Japan 27.87%
Answer is 0.1489056
 
Bruce Bowler 0.1 /1.489
Calvin .11 /1.354
 
** CORRECT ** 0.1489056
 
Stephen Perry 0.15 *1.0073
Peter Smyth 0.19 *1.276
John Masters 0.2 *1.343
Joshua Kreitzer 0.2 *1.343
Dan Tilque .2 *1.343
Pete Gayde 0.20 *1.343
Dan Blum 0.3 *2.015
Erland Sommarskog 0.78 *5.238
 
Erland Sommarskog is eliminated.
 
--
Mark Brader, Toronto | "Ah, determinism (likewise, forgetfulness) reigns."
msb@vex.net | --Steve Summit
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 28 09:11PM -0500

This contest is now open only to Dan Blum, Bruce Bowler, Pete Gayde,
Joshua Kreitzer, John Masters, Stephen Perry, Peter Smyth, Dan
Tilque, and the entrant posting as "Calvin". See the earlier
postings for full rules. You have 4 days to post your answers,
if you need that long.
 
2. According to latest numbers given for each country in the CIA
World Factbook as of when this contest began, the *per-capita
gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
for Montenegro?
 
--
Mark Brader 1. remove ball from package. 2. place in hand.
msb@vex.net 3. call dog by name. 4. throw ball.
Toronto -- directions seen on rubber ball package
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Apr 28 08:02PM -0700

Mark Brader wrote:
> gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
> parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
> for Montenegro?
 
2.9
 
--
Dan Tilque
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Apr 29 03:53AM

> gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
> parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
> for Montenegro?
 
3.7
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
Joe <joe@oxtedonline.com>: Apr 29 08:15AM +0100

On 2018-04-29 02:11:28 +0000, Mark Brader said:
 
> gross domestic product* of Monaco, on a purchasing power
> parity basis, was how many times the corresponding statistic
> for Montenegro?
 
1.2
 
--
"To err, as they say, is human. To forgive is divine. To err by
withholding your forgiveness until it's too late is to become divinely
fucked up."
― Jonathan Tropper, The Book of Joe
Pete Gayde <pagrsg@wowway.com>: Apr 28 11:55PM

Calvin <334152@gmail.com> wrote in
 
> 1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What
> three words does CSV stand for?
 
Comma Separated Values
 
> 2 Which playwright's lesser-known
> works include 'The Night of the Iguana' (1961) and 'The Rose Tattoo'
> (1951)?
 
Irving
 
> 3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the
> title character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
 
X-Men
 
> 4 Who designed the Banqueting House in London's Whitehall?
 
Wren
 
> 5 Those
> suffering from gout have elevated levels of which acid in the blood?
 
Uric
 
> 6 'Tea for the Tillerman' is a 1970 album by which British
> singer-songwriter?
 
Cat Stevens
 
> 8 Which team sport features in the 1985 comedy film 'Teen Wolf'?
> 9 Clouds', 'Lysistrata' and 'The Frogs' are plays by which
> playwright (c. 446-386 BC)?
 
Heroditus
 
> 10 In which US state is the Air Force
> facility commonly known as Area 51 located?
 
New Mexico
 
 
> cheers,
> calvin
 
Pete Gayde
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Apr 28 07:20PM -0700

Calvin wrote:
> 1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What three words does CSV stand for?
> 2 Which playwright's lesser-known works include 'The Night of the Iguana' (1961) and 'The Rose Tattoo' (1951)?
 
Kafka
 
> 3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the title character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
> 4 Who designed the Banqueting House in London's Whitehall?
 
Christopher Wren
 
> 5 Those suffering from gout have elevated levels of which acid in the blood?
 
uric acid
 
> 6 'Tea for the Tillerman' is a 1970 album by which British singer-songwriter?
> 7 Which element has the chemical symbol Hg?
 
mercury
 
> 8 Which team sport features in the 1985 comedy film 'Teen Wolf'?
> 9 Clouds', 'Lysistrata' and 'The Frogs' are plays by which playwright (c. 446-386 BC)?
> 10 In which US state is the Air Force facility commonly known as Area 51 located?
 
Nevada
 
 
--
Dan Tilque
Jason Kreitzer <jk71875@gmail.com>: Apr 28 06:16PM -0700

On Friday, April 27, 2018 at 1:01:04 AM UTC-4, Mark Brader wrote:
 
> * Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
> Expand each acronym to what it stands for.
 
> 1. HTTP.
Hypertext Transfer Protocol
> 2. USB.
> 3. HDMI.
> 4. GUI.
Graphics User Interface
> 5. LAN.
Local Area Network
> 7. RFID.
> 8. NFC.
> 9. CPU.
Central Processing Unit
> 10. RAM.
Random Access Memory
Dan Tilque <dtilque@frontier.com>: Apr 28 07:09PM -0700

Mark Brader wrote:
> Please see the handout at
 
> http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/6-7/masc.pdf
 
> and see what you know about these *mascots*!
 
I think I just overdosed on cuteness.
 
> 13. M (decoy).
> 14. N.
> 15. O.
 
Nagano
 
 
> * Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
> Expand each acronym to what it stands for.
 
> 1. HTTP.
 
hypertext transfer protocol
 
> 2. USB.
 
universal serial bus
 
> 3. HDMI.
 
high definition multimedia interface
 
> 4. GUI.
 
graphic user interface
 
> 5. LAN.
 
local area network
 
> 6. VPN.
 
virtual something-or-other
 
> 7. RFID.
 
radio frequency identification
 
> 8. NFC.
> 9. CPU.
 
central processing unit
 
> 10. RAM.
 
random access memory
 
 
--
Dan Tilque
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Saturday, April 28, 2018

Digest for rec.games.trivia@googlegroups.com - 6 updates in 4 topics

Joe <joe@oxtedonline.com>: Apr 27 01:02PM +0100

On 2018-04-21 06:25:26 +0000, Joe said:
 
It doesn't look as if there will be any more entrants so I am closing
this early. Herewith the answers to RQ 290.
 
 
> 1. Name this building.
 
> https://www.dropbox.com/s/zcqkf3v54jp0fd2/Q1.jpeg?dl=0
 
> Hint: you will probably see a lot more of it next month.
 
Windsor Castle. Site of the Royal Wedding next month.
 
 
> 2. Freiberger, Suffolk Punch and Lokai are breeds of which animal?
 
They are all horses.
 
 
> 3. Of whom did Edward Gibbon write "The more scandalous charges were
> suppressed; [Answer] was accused only of piracy, rape, sodomy, murder
> and incest."?
 
The vicar of Christ, aka The Bishop of Rome or the Pope. Specifically
Pope John XXIII not to be confused with the 20th century John XXIII.
Usually referred to as an Antipope, he was one of three claimants to
the Papacy.
 
'Some infamous bishop' is not specific enough, sorry.
 
 
> 4. Which singer was born Farrokh Bulsara in 1946.
 
Freddie Mercury, lead singer with Queen.
 
> Richard Bachman? One of these, Thinner (1984) sold 28,000 copies on the
> first run. When Bachman's real name was revealed it sold ten times as
> many.
 
Stephen King
 
 
> 6. Name the android portrayed by Lance Henriksen in the film Aliens.
 
Bishop
 
 
> 7. Which French actor/singer was nominated for the Academy Award for
> Best Actor in 1929 for The Love Parade and again in 1930 for The Big
> Pond?
 
Maurice Chevalier
 
> suits (red, yellow, green and black) of 14 cards each, numbered 1 to 14
> plus a [Answer] card? It was designed for those cultures, e.g. Puritan
> or Mennonite, who consider a regular deck of cards sinful.
 
Rook
 
 
> 9. Which administrative region of Italy has Milan as its capital?
 
Lombardy. This is where Lombard Banking originated. Lombard Banking is
where the lender takes goods as security against the loan and charges a
fee to the borrower to reclaim the goods. Pawn shops are often known as
Lombards.
 
 
> 10. What is the theme?
 
Chess. The answers to clues 1 to 8 are arranged in the order in which
the pieces start on the board.
 
Rook (aka Castle)
Knight (aka Horse)
Bishop
Queen
King
Bishop
Knight (Chevalier in French)
Rook
 
Scores as follows:
 
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 Q10 Total
Mark 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 6
Erland 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
Peter 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 3
Calvin 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 5
Marc 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Dan 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 8
Totals 3 1 0 6 3 1 3 2 4 2
 
Dan Blum wins by a clear margin. Congratulations and over to you for RQ 291.
 
--
"To err, as they say, is human. To forgive is divine. To err by
withholding your forgiveness until it's too late is to become divinely
fucked up."
― Jonathan Tropper, The Book of Joe
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Apr 27 01:57PM


> Dan Blum wins by a clear margin. Congratulations and over to you for RQ 291.
 
Thanks! I feel better now about missing Mark's game-themed RQ while I
was away. I will try to have something up by late Sunday.
 
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 27 03:39PM -0500

If you expand the tabs as every 4 positions and sort the lines, the score table
becomes legible as:
 
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 Q10 Total
Dan 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 8
Mark 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 6
Calvin 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 5
Peter 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 3
Erland 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 2
Marc 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
Totals 3 1 0 6 3 1 3 2 4 2
 
Well done, Dan Blum.
--
Mark Brader | "Oh, sure, you can make anything sound sleazy if you,
Toronto | you know, tell it exactly the way it happened."
msb@vex.net | -- Bruce Rasmussen: "Anything But Love"
Gareth Owen <gwowen@gmail.com>: Apr 27 06:55PM +0100


> 1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What three
> words does CSV stand for?
 
Comma Separated Variable
 
> 2 Which playwright's lesser-known works include 'The Night of the
> Iguana' (1961) and 'The Rose Tattoo' (1951)?
 
Tennessee Williams
 
> 3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the title
> character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
 
Kickboxer?
 
> 4 Who designed the Banqueting House in London's Whitehall?
 
Wren?
 
> 5 Those suffering from gout have elevated levels of which acid in the
> blood?
 
Lactic??
 
> 6 'Tea for the Tillerman' is a 1970 album by which British
> singer-songwriter?
 
Cat Stevens (as he was then)
 
> 7 Which element has the chemical symbol Hg?
 
Mercury
 
> 8 Which team sport features in the 1985 comedy film 'Teen Wolf'?
 
Basketball
 
> 9 Clouds', 'Lysistrata' and 'The Frogs' are plays by which playwright
> (c. 446-386 BC)?
 
Aristophanes
 
> 10 In which US state is the Air Force facility commonly known as Area
> 51 located?
 
Nevada
Gareth Owen <gwowen@gmail.com>: Apr 27 06:52PM +0100

>> km Darien Gap, located in which Central American country?
 
> Panama
> It's a little more complicated as Erland explained
 
I got this one
 
>> 8 At around 200,000 km, which country has the world's longest coastline?
 
> Canada, eh
 
This one too
 
>> 9 Which Irish-American considers himself Lord of the Dance?
 
> Michael Flatley
 
And this one
 
>> 10 Which crustacean provides the staple diet of the blue whale?
 
> Krill
 
And this one
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Apr 27 02:03PM


> * Game 6, Round 7 - Sports - Winter Olympic Mascots
 
> 3. B.
 
Helsinki; Oslo
 
> 5. D.
 
Nagano
 
> * Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
> 1. HTTP.
 
hypertext transfer protocol
 
> 2. USB.
 
universal serial bus
 
> 3. HDMI.
 
high-density monitor interface
 
> 4. GUI.
 
graphical user interface
 
> 5. LAN.
 
local area network
 
> 6. VPN.
 
virtual private network
 
> 7. RFID.
 
radio frequency identification
 
> 9. CPU.
 
central processing unit
 
> 10. RAM.
 
random access memory
 
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
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Friday, April 27, 2018

Digest for rec.games.trivia@googlegroups.com - 18 updates in 6 topics

msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 27 12:00AM -0500

These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2018-02-26,
and should be interpreted accordingly.
 
On each question you may give up to two answers, but if you give
both a right answer and a wrong answer, there is a small penalty.
Please post all your answers to the newsgroup in a single followup,
based only on your own knowledge. (In your answer posting, quote
the questions and place your answer below each one.) I will reveal
the correct answers in about 3 days.
 
All questions were written by members of Bill Psychs and are
used here by permission, but have been reformatted and may have
been retyped and/or edited by me. For further information see
my 2017-09-25 companion posting on "Questions from the Canadian
Inquisition (QFTCI*)".
 
 
* Game 6, Round 7 - Sports - Winter Olympic Mascots
 
Sure, each Olympic Games has its favorites -- the athletes or teams
representing their country, embodying the spirit of camaraderie,
breaking records and all that -- but this round is not about them.
Please see the handout at
 
http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/msb/6-7/masc.pdf
 
and see what you know about these *mascots*!
 
(Note: there are no Paralympic mascots in this round, and all of
the games we'll ask about are winter ones.)
 
Questions #1-2 are about games held in Canada. In each case,
*name* either one of the two mascots shown.
 
1. A.
2. I.
 
I've rearranged the remaining questions in order of the images used.
For each image, name *either the year or the host city* of the
relevant winter games.
 
There were 5 decoys, which I have interspersed with the rest;
some or all of the decoys are from summer Olympics. Answer the
decoys if you like for fun, but for no points (and if you want to
show off, also for no points, on each of questions #3-15 you can
give the mascots' names as well).
 
3. B.
4. C.
5. D.
6. E (decoy).
7. F.
8. G.
9. H (decoy).
[Picture I was used in question #2, remember.]
10. J (decoy).
11. K (decoy).
12. L.
13. M (decoy).
14. N.
15. O.
 
 
* Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
Expand each acronym to what it stands for.
 
1. HTTP.
2. USB.
3. HDMI.
4. GUI.
5. LAN.
6. VPN.
7. RFID.
8. NFC.
9. CPU.
10. RAM.
 
--
Mark Brader, Toronto | "This is as 'real' as your so-called life gets!"
msb@vex.net | "Q Who", ST:TNG, Maurice Hurley
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
Joshua Kreitzer <gromit82@hotmail.com>: Apr 27 05:15AM

msb@vex.net (Mark Brader) wrote in news:Q96dnbzXKJoWM3_HnZ2dnUU7-
 
> Questions #1-2 are about games held in Canada. In each case,
> *name* either one of the two mascots shown.
 
> 2. I.
 
Howdy
 
> For each image, name *either the year or the host city* of the
> relevant winter games.
 
> 3. B.
 
Innsbruck
 
> 4. C.
 
Albertville; Torino
 
> 5. D.
 
Sarajevo; Sochi
 
> 7. F.
 
PyeongChang; Nagano
 
> 8. G.
 
Albertville; Salt Lake City
 
> 12. L.
 
Salt Lake City
 
> 13. M (decoy).
 
Atlanta (Summer Olympics)
 
> 14. N.
 
Torino
 
> 15. O.
 
Lillehammer

 
> * Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
> Expand each acronym to what it stands for.
 
> 1. HTTP.
 
hypertext transfer protocol
 
> 2. USB.
 
universal serial bus; universal series bus
 
> 4. GUI.
 
graphical user interface
 
> 5. LAN.
 
local area network
 
> 6. VPN.
 
virtual private network
 
> 7. RFID.
 
radio frequency identification
 
> 9. CPU.
 
central processing unit
 
> 10. RAM.
 
random access memory
 
--
Joshua Kreitzer
gromit82@hotmail.com
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 26 10:36PM -0700

On Friday, April 27, 2018 at 3:01:04 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:

> * Game 6, Round 7 - Sports - Winter Olympic Mascots
 
Pass
 
 
> * Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
> Expand each acronym to what it stands for.
 
> 1. HTTP.
 
Hyper test transfer protocal
 
> 2. USB.
 
Universal serial bus
 
> 3. HDMI.
 
High definition, um, media interface?
 
> 4. GUI.
 
Graphic user interface
 
> 5. LAN.
 
Local area network
 
> 6. VPN.
 
Virtual private network
 
> 7. RFID.
 
Radio frequency identification
 
> 8. NFC.
 
NFI
 
> 9. CPU.
 
Central processing unit
 
> 10. RAM.
 
Random access memory
 
cheers,
calvin
Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se>: Apr 27 08:45AM +0200

> * Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
> Expand each acronym to what it stands for.
 
> 1. HTTP.
 
Hypertext transfer protocol
 
> 2. USB.
 
Universal service bus
 
> 3. HDMI.
 
High-definition media interface
 
> 4. GUI.
 
Graphical user interface
 
> 5. LAN.
 
Local area network
 
> 6. VPN.
 
Virtual privte network
 
> 8. NFC.
 
Near field communication
 
> 9. CPU.
 
Central processor unit
 
> 10. RAM.
 
Random access memory
"Peter Smyth" <smythp@gmail.com>: Apr 27 08:18AM

Mark Brader wrote:
 
 
> * Game 6, Round 8 - Miscellaneous - Technological Acronyms
 
> Expand each acronym to what it stands for.
 
> 1. HTTP.
Hyper Text Transfer Protocol
> 2. USB.
Universal Serial Bus
> 3. HDMI.
High Definition Media Interface
> 4. GUI.
Graphical User Interface
> 5. LAN.
Local Area Network
> 6. VPN.
Virtual Private Network
> 7. RFID.
Radio Frequency IDentification
> 8. NFC.
> 9. CPU.
Central Processing Unit
> 10. RAM.
Random Access Memory
 
Peter Smyth
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 26 06:37PM -0700

On Monday, April 23, 2018 at 12:47:06 PM UTC+10, Calvin wrote:
> 1 What three words complete this adage: "The hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that..."?
 
rules the world
 
> 2 Kathryn Bigelow received a Best Director Oscar, the first female to do so, for which 2010 film?
 
The Hurt Locker
 
> 3 In which century was the Battle of the Boyne fought near Drogheda in Ireland, between the forces of King James II of England, and the Dutch Prince William of Orange?
 
17th [1690]
 
> 4 Who was assassinated in the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel in LA in 1968?
 
Robert Kennedy
 
> 5 What sport is played professionally (and inter-continentally) by the Toronto Wolfpack?
 
Rugby League
I accepted either word, even though 'rugby' alone would be marked wrong in Australia. The word means different things in different places.
 
> 6 Which syndrome do the TV characters Lisa Simpson and Jan Brady supposedly suffer from?
 
Middle Child syndrome
 
> 7 The Pan-American highway extends from Prudhoe Bay in Alaska to Ushuaia in southern Argentina. It is continuous but for the c. 150 km Darien Gap, located in which Central American country?
 
Panama
It's a little more complicated as Erland explained
 
> 8 At around 200,000 km, which country has the world's longest coastline?
 
Canada, eh

> 9 Which Irish-American considers himself Lord of the Dance?
 
Michael Flatley
 
> 10 Which crustacean provides the staple diet of the blue whale?
 
Krill
 
 
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 Q10 TOTAL TB Quiz 516
1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 9 50 Mark Brader
1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 8 45 Dan Blum
0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 6 35 Pete Gayde
0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 6 35 Peter Smyth
1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 27 Gareth Owen
0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 5 33 Joe
0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 5 33 Marc Dashevsky
0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 5 34 Dan Tilque
0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 22 Erland S
- - - - - - - - - - --- ----------
3 5 7 7 5 2 8 2 6 7 52 58%
 
Congratulations Mark.
 
cheers,
calvin
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 26 10:03PM -0500

"Calvin":
> Congratulations Mark.
 
Thankew!
--
Mark Brader, Toronto Attenton to dteail; thats' the secreg.
msb@vex.net --Robin Bignall
Joe <joe@oxtedonline.com>: Apr 27 08:23AM +0100

On 2018-04-27 01:37:55 +0000, Calvin said:
 
 
> Congratulations Mark.
 
> cheers,
> calvin
 
I got Q9 wrong
 
--
"To err, as they say, is human. To forgive is divine. To err by
withholding your forgiveness until it's too late is to become divinely
fucked up."
― Jonathan Tropper, The Book of Joe
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 26 06:48PM -0700

1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What three words does CSV stand for?
2 Which playwright's lesser-known works include 'The Night of the Iguana' (1961) and 'The Rose Tattoo' (1951)?
3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the title character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
4 Who designed the Banqueting House in London's Whitehall?
5 Those suffering from gout have elevated levels of which acid in the blood?
6 'Tea for the Tillerman' is a 1970 album by which British singer-songwriter?
7 Which element has the chemical symbol Hg?
8 Which team sport features in the 1985 comedy film 'Teen Wolf'?
9 Clouds', 'Lysistrata' and 'The Frogs' are plays by which playwright (c. 446-386 BC)?
10 In which US state is the Air Force facility commonly known as Area 51 located?
 
cheers,
calvin
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 26 10:18PM -0500

"Calvin":
> 1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What
> three words does CSV stand for?
 
Comma-separated values.
 
> 2 Which playwright's lesser-known works include 'The Night of the
> Iguana' (1961) and 'The Rose Tattoo' (1951)?
 
Williams.
 
> 3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the title
> character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
 
"Street Fighter"? (I don't even know if that's a real title.)
 
> 4 Who designed the Banqueting House in London's Whitehall?
 
Jones.
 
> 5 Those suffering from gout have elevated levels of which acid in
> the blood?
 
Uric.
 
> 6 'Tea for the Tillerman' is a 1970 album by which British
> singer-songwriter?
 
Johnson?
 
> 7 Which element has the chemical symbol Hg?
 
Mercury.
 
> 8 Which team sport features in the 1985 comedy film 'Teen Wolf'?
 
American football?
 
> 9 Clouds', 'Lysistrata' and 'The Frogs' are plays by which
> playwright (c. 446-386 BC)?
 
Aristophanes?
 
> 10 In which US state is the Air Force facility commonly known as
> Area 51 located?
 
Nevada, I think.
--
Mark Brader | "That would be correct, if it was correct." --Mark Brader
Toronto | "It's amazing how often that's said about my statements."
msb@vex.net | --Greg Goss
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
tool@panix.com (Dan Blum): Apr 27 03:18AM

> 1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What three words does CSV stand for?
 
comma separated values
 
> 2 Which playwright's lesser-known works include 'The Night of the Iguana' (1961) and 'The Rose Tattoo' (1951)?
 
Tennessee Williams
 
> 3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the title character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
 
Timecop
 
> 4 Who designed the Banqueting House in London's Whitehall?
 
Inigo Jones
 
> 5 Those suffering from gout have elevated levels of which acid in the blood?
 
uric
 
> 7 Which element has the chemical symbol Hg?
 
mercury
 
> 8 Which team sport features in the 1985 comedy film 'Teen Wolf'?
 
football
 
> 9 Clouds', 'Lysistrata' and 'The Frogs' are plays by which playwright (c. 446-386 BC)?
 
Aristophanes
 
> 10 In which US state is the Air Force facility commonly known as Area 51 located?
 
Nevada
 
--
_______________________________________________________________________
Dan Blum tool@panix.com
"I wouldn't have believed it myself if I hadn't just made it up."
Erland Sommarskog <esquel@sommarskog.se>: Apr 27 08:40AM +0200

> 1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What
> three words does CSV stand for?
 
Comma-separated values
 
> 3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the title
> character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
 
Timecop
 
> 7 Which element has the chemical symbol Hg?
 
Mercury
 
> 10 In which US state is the Air Force facility commonly known as
> Area 51 located?
 
Nevada
Joe <joe@oxtedonline.com>: Apr 27 08:13AM +0100

On 2018-04-27 01:48:42 +0000, Calvin said:
 
> 1 In computing, CSV files are commonly used to store data. What three
> words does CSV stand for?
 
Comma Separated Value
 
> 2 Which playwright's lesser-known works include 'The Night of the
> Iguana' (1961) and 'The Rose Tattoo' (1951)?
 
Tennessee Williams
 
> 3 Jean-Claude Van Damme and Matt Battaglia have played the title
> character Luc Devereaux in which film franchise?
> 4 Who designed the Banqueting House in London's Whitehall?
 
Nash
 
> 5 Those suffering from gout have elevated levels of which acid in the blood?
 
Lactic
 
> 6 'Tea for the Tillerman' is a 1970 album by which British singer-songwriter?
 
Cat Stevens
 
> 7 Which element has the chemical symbol Hg?
> 8 Which team sport features in the 1985 comedy film 'Teen Wolf'?
 
Basketball
 
> 9 Clouds', 'Lysistrata' and 'The Frogs' are plays by which playwright
> (c. 446-386 BC)?
 
Aristophanes
 
> 10 In which US state is the Air Force facility commonly known as Area
> 51 located?
 
Idaho
 
 
--
"To err, as they say, is human. To forgive is divine. To err by
withholding your forgiveness until it's too late is to become divinely
fucked up."
― Jonathan Tropper, The Book of Joe
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 26 06:44PM -0700

On Tuesday, April 24, 2018 at 4:02:10 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:
 
 
> 1. This German pilot was credited with 80 air combat victories,
> more than any other pilot in World War I. He was a nobleman
> who started his military career in the cavalry.
 
Von Richthoffen
 
 
> 8. This French pilot holds the title of "Allied ace of aces".
> He was credited with 75 victories, more than any other allied
> pilot.
 
Garros
 
> 9. This French ace named each of his airplanes "Vieux Charles".
> Credited with 54 victories, he was a national hero when he went
> missing in action in 1917.
 
Garros
 
 
> 6. This drama follows the political rivalries and romance of Queen
> Elizabeth II's reign and the events that shaped the second half
> of the 20th century. Starring Claire Foy and Matt Smith.
 
The Crown
 
> 7. In this Emmy- and Golden-Globe-winning political drama,
> a ruthless politician will stop at nothing to conquer
> Washington DC. Starring Robin Wright and Kevin Spacey.
 
House of Cards
 
 
> 10. This sci-fi anthology series explores a twisted, high-tech
> near-future where humanity's greatest innovations and darkest
> instincts collide. The cast changes from episode to episode.
 
cheers,
calvin
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 26 11:58PM -0500

Mark Brader:
 
> World War I saw the birth of aerial fighter combat. If a pilot
> shot down five enemy aircraft, he was considered an ace. Each of
> the following pilots is a famous World War I ace: name them.
 
In the original game, this was the second-hardest round both in this
game and in the entire season. So guess what you have coming up in
a few days!
 
> 1. This German pilot was credited with 80 air combat victories,
> more than any other pilot in World War I. He was a nobleman
> who started his military career in the cavalry.
 
Manfred von Richthofen. (Generously accepting "Red Baron", because
they did in the original game.) 4 for Dan Blum, Pete, Joshua, Jason,
Dan Tilque, and Calvin.
 
> 2. Two airports are named after this Canadian ace. He was credited
> with 72 victories, although the number is debated by historians.
 
William Avery "Billy" Bishop. 4 for Joshua. 3 for Dan Blum.
 
One airport is in Owen Sound, where he was born. The second is
the Toronto Island airport, because -- uh -- well, Toronto is one
of the various other places he lived. Toronto for a little while.
The people in Owen Sound were a bit upset about that one.
 
> 3. Two flying maneuvers are named after this German pilot.
> One is a loop and the other is a turn. He was credited with
> 15 air combat victories.
 
Max Immelmann. 4 for Dan Blum and Dan Tilque.
 
> 4. This Canadian ace had the second-most air combat victories,
> behind <answer 2>. He had a reputation as a great leader and
> the terminal at Nanaimo Airport is named in his honor.
 
Raymond Collishaw.
 
> 5. This British ace was the third pilot to receive the Victoria
> Cross, for shooting down three enemy aircraft in a single day.
> He was killed in a famous dogfight with <answer 1>.
 
Lanoe Hawker.
 
> 6. This German pilot, credited with 48 air combat victories, was
> noted for his bravery. He was killed in combat after taking
> on eight British pilots single-handedly.
 
Werner Voss.
 
> 7. This German pilot is considered the father of air-combat tactics.
> He was also famous for mentoring <answer 1>.
 
Oswald Boelcke.
 
> 8. This French pilot holds the title of "Allied ace of aces".
> He was credited with 75 victories, more than any other allied
> pilot.
 
René Fonck. 4 for Dan Blum.
 
> 9. This French ace named each of his airplanes "Vieux Charles".
> Credited with 54 victories, he was a national hero when he went
> missing in action in 1917.
 
Georges Guynemer.
 
> 10. This British pilot was the first ace to become a British
> national hero. He was credited with 44 victories and awarded
> the Victoria Cross posthumously.
 
Albert Ball.
 
 
> member of his gang, who's found a new life in a quiet town
> populated only by women. Starring Jeff Daniels and Michelle
> Dockery.
 
"Godless".
 
> expose dark secrets from their past, sibling loyalties are
> put to the test. Starring Kyle Chandler, Ben Mendelsohn, and
> Sissy Spacek.
 
"Bloodline".
 
> 3. The true story of Colombia's infamously violent and powerful drug
> cartels fuels this gritty gangster drama series. Starring Wagner
> Moura and Pedro Pascal.
 
"Narcos".
 
> delving into the psychology of murder and getting uneasily
> close to all-too-real monsters. Starring Jonathan Groff and
> Holt McCallany.
 
"Mindhunter".
 
> 5. A financial adviser drags his family from Chicago to Missouri,
> where he must launder $500,000,000 in 5 years to appease a
> drug boss. Starring Jason Bateman and Laura Linney.
 
"Ozark".
 
> 6. This drama follows the political rivalries and romance of Queen
> Elizabeth II's reign and the events that shaped the second half
> of the 20th century. Starring Claire Foy and Matt Smith.
 
"The Crown". 4 for Peter, Dan Blum, Pete, Joshua, and Calvin.
 
> 7. In this Emmy- and Golden-Globe-winning political drama,
> a ruthless politician will stop at nothing to conquer
> Washington DC. Starring Robin Wright and Kevin Spacey.
 
"House of Cards". 4 for Peter, Dan Blum, Joshua, Jason, and Calvin.
 
> 8. A privileged New Yorker ends up in a women's prison when
> a past crime catches up with her in this Emmy-winning series.
> Starring Taylor Schilling, Kate Mulgrew, and Laura Prepon.
 
"Orange is the New Black". 4 for Peter, Dan Blum, and Joshua.
 
> involving secret experiments, terrifying supernatural forces,
> and one strange little girl. Starring Winona Ryder and David
> Harbour.
 
"Stranger Things". 4 for Peter, Dan Blum, Joshua, and Jason.
 
> 10. This sci-fi anthology series explores a twisted, high-tech
> near-future where humanity's greatest innovations and darkest
> instincts collide. The cast changes from episode to episode.
 
"Black Mirror". 4 for Dan Blum.
 
"Dark Mirror" was that title of a movie and a TV-movie, so I did
not think I could accept it as "almost correct" here.
 
The series that that description made *me* think of was "Philip
K. Dick's Electric Dreams", but that's not a Netflix series; it
was produced by Sony for Amazon and the UK's Channel 4.
 
 
Scores, if there are no errors:
 
GAME 6 ROUNDS-> 2 4 6 TOTALS
TOPICS-> Lit His Ent
Dan Blum 40 15 20 75
Joshua Kreitzer 35 8 16 59
"Calvin" 28 4 8 40
Jason Kreitzer 16 4 8 28
Peter Smyth 8 0 16 24
Pete Gayde 8 4 4 16
Marc Dashevsky 16 -- -- 16
Dan Tilque 4 8 0 12
Erland Sommarskog 4 -- -- 4
 
--
Mark Brader | "Now I feel stupid. Well, I guess it's not bad
Toronto | if that happens once a decade or so."
msb@vex.net | --Al Fargnoli
 
My text in this article is in the public domain.
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 26 06:38PM -0700

On Monday, April 23, 2018 at 2:30:17 PM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:
> > A pure guess, but surely they wouldn't appropriate that already taken
> > title in such a way???
 
> Already taken by an event that occurred 108 years later?
 
But well before publication.
 
cheers,
calvin
msb@vex.net (Mark Brader): Apr 26 10:02PM -0500

Mark Brader:
>>>> 6. Published 1975. This historical novel is the story of a massive
>>>> gold heist, which takes place on a moving train in England
>>>> in 1855.
 
"Calvin":
>>> The Great Train Robbery
>>> A pure guess, but surely they wouldn't appropriate that already taken
>>> title in such a way???
 
Mark Brader:
>> Already taken by an event that occurred 108 years later?
 
"Calvin":
> But well before publication.
 
Well, so was the actual theft in 1855!
--
Mark Brader | "We may take pride in observing that there is
Toronto | not a single film showing in London today which
msb@vex.net | deals with one of the burning issues of the day."
| -- Lord Tyrell, British film censors' chief, 1937
Calvin <334152@gmail.com>: Apr 26 06:46PM -0700

On Wednesday, April 25, 2018 at 5:45:08 AM UTC+10, Mark Brader wrote:
 
> 1. According to the CIA World Factbook as of when this question
> was posted, the percentage of the population of Haiti who are
> over 65 is how many times the corresponding percentage for Japan?
 
.11
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