Part A:  I heard this one where the friend also has a key that will open 
his lock, but not yours.  Also, the condition is that no destructive 
techniques are allowed, so breaking or cutting wasn't a possible solution.

Part B:
He never states that the rope is attached to the top of the pole, just that 
it's attached to the pole.  So, the answer is that the poles are somewhere 
between 0 and 32 feet apart.

Craig

At 11:33 PM 4/5/2002 -0500, you wrote:
>I'll bite.
>a) Boxes and diamond. Gordian Knot technique. Lock the diamond in your box
>and send it to your friend. He breaks the lock or cuts open the box.
>b) Poles and rope. The poles are touching.
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Dusty Harper [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Friday, April 05, 2002 4:55 PM
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: RE: My interview story [7:40553]
>
> > The goal is to determine how you think.  Most real world solutions to
> > problems can be applied to technological hurdles, or problems.
> >
> > As an example:
> >
> > Prep:
> >       You have an empty box, a lock, a key for your lock, and a
> > diamond.
> >       Your friend has an empty box, and a lock for his box.
> >
> > Goal:
> >       You want to get the diamond to your friend via courier.  However
> > the   courier will steal anything that is not locked.  How do you do
> > this?
> >
> >
> > Another example:
> >
> >       If you have 2 20' poles, a 32' rope strung between them, and the
> > lowest point of the rope is 4' off of the ground, how far apart are
> > the poles?
> >
> > It gauges how one thinks and handles situations.




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