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Originally posted by: DanielB
I know it's a particularly nasty riddle. I'll give you the same thing I got that gave me a head-start (I've worked off this idea).... the prisoners agree that:
#1 they are all assigned one token, and a counter will collect all these tokens as to be able to assert that they have all entered the central living area.
#2 During the first 100 days:
If it is their first time in the living room and the light is off to leave it off. They then remove their token.
If it is their second time in the living room and the light is off to turn it on and assign themselves the role of the counter. The count (number of tokens) is equal to the day number minus one (since he's been in the room twice).
If the light is on, do nothing regardless until day 100, in which case switch it off.
This gives a bit of a head-start, on average the initial count is 12. Meaning there are now on average 11 people with no token, 88 people with one token each and the counter with 12 tokens.
I will also give you my main concept, which I came up with myself and is a huge advantage if you couldn't think of it yourself.
The concept is if we were to assert that a prisoner releases his token, wherever possible for the counter to collect by turning the light on, then we expect the counter and everyone else to enter the room once every time a token is released. Meaning there is conceptually 100 room entries per token release. Reducing this ratio should be our main concern.
I believe I've worked out the perfect strategy, but I have to do some pretty heavy number-crunching until I can make it optimal.
Afterwards I believe I could then produce an optimal strategy with the rather nasty alteration:
The procedure ends not when a prisoner asserts that all prisoners have entered the room, rather the prisoner must assert that all other prisoners now know and have asserted that all prisoners have entered the central living room.
Ooooh that's nasty, I shouldn't have thought of it. But it can be done.
QuoteWell yes, for the most part. They could be recorded on paper or something in each prisoner's cell, if he has memory problems - I'll talk about the transfers later.
Originally posted by: Warbler
I think I understand it a little the "tokens" are imaginary right?
QuoteThey're using the light bulb to comunicate and transfer the tokens.
Originally posted by: ricarleite
Transfers?? Well, like I said, and I'm PRETTY sure of myself: if the prisoners absolutely cannot comunicate with each other, with no "token transfer" or anything like that, then it's IMPOSSIBLE to solve this one.