Archive for April, 2006

As part of the promotion of the Da Vinci Code movie, Sony has teamed up with Google to run the Quest, which contains a daily question until the movie premiers. The questions (and therefore answers) vary each time you play, and some are randomized puzzles rather than trivia, so I am including strategies along with plain answers where necessary. You will find Wikipedia and its entry on the book rather useful.

  1. Symbol Challenge. This game is based on Sudoku. If your shaded areas do not form nice, even squares (on in each quadrant), then click “new game” a few times until you get one to make it easier.
    “Please name the symbol on Robert Langdon.” blade
  2. Restoration Challenge. Move the blotches around. When you click on one, it will hilight the possible blotches with which you can swap. Move them such that they cover the “re” at the beginning but leave “na” and “me” (’name’) uncovered. “Name the symbol on Manuel Aringarosa.” Greek cross.
  3. Observation Challenge. Answer the questions based on the video.
    • “In the video, we see Robert Langdon dusting off a classical symbol, one associated with a character we only see a brief glimpse of in the video. What is the name of that oft-gilded symbol?” Fleur-de-lis, also associated with France and Quebec.
    • “Symbols, and symmetry, can be seen in the most unlikely of places. One such example is the position of the body at the crime scene, which resembles a drawing also depicted on the obverse of the Italian one-euro coin. What is the name of that famous Leonardo Da Vinci drawing?” Vitruvian Man
    • “One of the most iconic symbols of the movie is the cryptex, a small cylinder of stacked marble disks, embossed with letters and sealed with brass caps at either end. The twenty-six letters allow for almost twelve million possible password combinations — 11,881,376; to be exact. Armed with that knowledge, can you tell us how many dials it has?” 5 (26n=11,881,376, n=5)
  4. Curator Challenge. A puzzle where you have to hang the paintings around. Start with the big pictures (click the back/left arrow under the painting in the left pane) and hang them first, as there are only one or two possible ways to hang them both at the same time. Keep working your way backwards with the medium-sized paintings followed by the small ones.
    “The symbol shown on Sophie Neveu (pictured at left) is called” a chalice.
  5. Chess Puzzle
    • “What is the spiked belt that Silas wears called?” cilice
    • “What are the second, third, and fourth leading members of the Priory of Sion called?” Sénéchaux
    • “The engraved tablet that is supposed to reveal the hiding place of the Holy Grail is called the” keystone.
  6. Geography Challenge. Note that a few of the pieces have text on them; these go in the lower right. When you put a piece into the proper place it will lock. You’re aiming for an aerial view of New York (actually lower Manhattan and western Brooklyn; note Ground Zero and the [southern-most] Brooklyn Bridge).
  7. Symbol Challenge. Another take on the Sudoku puzzle, but this time without the luxury of even regions. The general strategy is to pick a shaded regions, see what pieces it needs, and put a piece in place only if it cannot go anywhere else in the region. Then there will be a math question. You can use a simple Google search for many of these, for example query “10 miles in kilometers“.
    • “What are 10,879 fortnights in years (to the nearest whole number)?” 417 (a fortnight is two weeks)
    • “What are four score Scottish ells in hands?” 740
    • “Which is longer, a TeX point or an ATA Pica point?” TeX point
    • “What is 1500 arcminutes in degrees?” 25
    • “How many nails in 138 nautical miles?” 4472021
    • “How much is one divided by phi, plus one, minus phi?” 0 (zero)
  8. Restoration Challenge. Keep shuffling the blotches around keeping the numbers uncovered. This took me a couple times. Keep the numbers uncovered; this provides you with an ISBN number which you can search for at Amazon. My question was about ISBN 0860784843
  9. , which is a book titled “Banks, Palaces and Entrepreneurs in Renaissance Florence”. Dropping ‘banks’ and ‘palaces’, as suggested by the Quest’s question, left me with the answer, entrepreneurs.

  10. Curator Challenge. Another hang-the-painting puzzle. Again, start with the bigger ones.

    You can find the answers very quickly on Wikipedia: Charles Nodier (born 1780, died 1844), Isaac Newton (born December 1642), Mont Blanc (Pennine Alps), France (547030 sq km), Victor Hugo (died 1885), Galileo Galilei (born in February, died in 1642), Italy (unified March 17, 1861).

  11. Observation Challenge. You can have the video opened in a separate tab for reference (use the slider below it to skip around and re-watch), or use the answers below. After filling in each answer you can press enter to see if it was correct.
    • “A seemingly-important stone-object is extracted from the ground by Silas. What is its shape?” octagon
    • “An interesting viewpoint is the vantage point from which we last see Silas. What is the last thing we see him touch?” holy water
    • “During the action in the video, we see many things shattered and destroyed, but what is it that will ultimately be broken?” silence
  12. Chess Challenge.
    • “A word that can be read the same backwards or forwards is called” a palindrome (my favorite palindrome: “go hang a salami, I’m a lasagna hog”)
    • “Jacques Sauniere’s body was found in which part of the Louvre?” the Denon Wing
    • “The quick brown fox jumps over a lazy dog is an example of” a panagram
  13. Geography Challenge. Again, find the words with the text and assemble them in the lower right corner so that they lock into place. The pieces with the river (greenish) go in the lower left. The answer is Rome (note the Colosseum in the lower left). Then it will ask you to “find the Palazzo Venezia by clicking on a Greek Cross hidden in the city”, which is just to the left of the red dot on this map. Your cursor won’t change when you hover over it, so just give it a click.
  14. Symbol Challenge. Another Sudoku-like puzzle. When you’re done it will ask you to translate a word ‐ be sure to use Google’s translator because other dictionaries can give you slightly different answers (for example, my favorite translator produced ‘environments’ while Google’s answer was “atmosphere’s”).
  15. Restoration Challenge. Uncover the message, then use an Atbash decoder to translate it.
  16. Curator Challenge. Hang the pictures again; remember to start with the big ones.
  17.  
  18.  
  19.  
  20. Symbol Challenge. First do the six-piece Sudoku puzzle. If at first you only get a few pieces on the board, start anew until you get a dozen or so. Then it will ask a question. The one I got:
    • “During his Italian Journeys, William Dean Howells notes that there are engineers of this nationality on all the Mediterranean steamers.” English. You can read the entire book for free at Project Gutenberg; I did a quick page-search for ‘engineer’ and the first instance gave me the answer.