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As yesterday's (hard) puzzle (#741908) hasn't been solved yet (new hint given in #743081), here is a comparatively simpler problem for today.
Solve for x:
Previous iteration: #741908 (unsolved)
So the answers are or
Phew, this took me a while. There goes my workday >:(
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when my colleagues ask me why i'm not publishing more, I'll have to tell them some physicist from South Korea has been sending me math puzzles....
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When my colleagues ask me why I'm not publishing more, I'll have to tell them I must keep competing minion researchers in check by keeping them busy with math puzzles. If no one publishes, we all win. No? :)
EDIT: as I wrote this, my phone buzzed to tell me I got paid a paper bonus by the university. They haven't noticed anything yet~~
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Congrats! My Econ prof friend in Korea told me about publication bonuses. Wish we had those at my institution
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They're nice for sure. But incentivises quantity over quality sometimes. Also profs arguing over who can be corresponding author just because of that.
Some unis also are getting absurd with the amounts. Heard of over 200k dollars for a paper in Nature or Science. More the case in China though, i think.
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Genius strategy
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @nym 29 Oct
That’s just as important!
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I believe there's two solutions for this, 1 and -1
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I concur, but I don’t know how to prove it
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It's pretty obviously 1.
Solution: plug in 1 to verify the answer.
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Indeed. But it's not the only solution.
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log1(37/21)?
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Not sure how you got to this expression...
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I can't remember how to solve x. (log?)
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You can easily check this inequality using , and .
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I've been looking at it wrong. Where do you have +, I saw x
I need to replace the lenses in my glasses
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Honest mistake ;)
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