The King William's College 2004 Quiz 119
A UK college creates an annual quiz for their students. Here's the Questions and Answers from a previous year, if you want to get an idea of just what sort of esoterica you're seeking.
You know you've landed gear-up when it takes full power to taxi.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Do Europeans Know this stuff? (Score:3, Informative)
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Do Europeans Know this stuff? (Score:1)
Re:Do Europeans Know this stuff? (Score:1)
Re:Do Europeans Know this stuff? (Score:2)
Re:Raise your hand... (Score:2)
Re:Raise your hand... (Score:2)
Simon
Re:Raise your hand... (Score:2)
Ken Jennings (Score:1)
Re:Ken Jennings (Score:3, Interesting)
Throwing these hard questions at him wouldn't have been enough. First, you would need someone who could beat Jenings in regards to accessible (easy) questions.
I like to consider Jenings' string of victories not as Jenings vs. Knowledge, but Jenings vs. Weak peers.
Re:Ken Jennings (Score:3, Interesting)
A good deal of the questions (after I looked at teh answers) actually weren;t that hard to answer if the question had been straight forward. In my opinion most of the difficulty in those questions is not knowing what the answer is, because almost anyone can memorize answers, but having a broad enough knowledge of the topic in order to understand the question
Re:Ken Jennings (Score:2)
Anyway, they're very hard but really not too obscure if you understand the background behind a topic. I knew an average of 2 or 3 from each category, mainly because I could make inferential guesses from the questions (and I knew almost all in a few categories, like Jazz).
Those questions are so easy... (Score:3, Funny)
Now, back to the eggnog!
Re:Those questions are so easy... (Score:2)
Re:Those questions are so easy... (Score:2)
Quick... (Score:4, Funny)
You know you are screwed... (Score:2, Interesting)
"Scire ubi aliquid invenire possis, ea demum maxima pars eruditionis est"
It seem to say something about write down the stuff you make up to the best of ability yours, but I will leave the real translation to those who are smart and well educated.
All I can say is that the test seems to over useless stuff. Give me a quiz over Star Trek or South Park or AT
Re:You know you are screwed... (Score:4, Informative)
"To know where you can find anything, that in short is the largest part of learning."
Three years of Latin + a confirmation by Google.
Re:You know you are screwed... (Score:2)
"To know where you can find anything, that in short is the largest part of learning." ;)
Three years of Latin + a confirmation by Google.
And the answer to the question is of course "Google" (where you can find anything, that is). Guess that's why Google didn't exist til I was already out of school.
Re:You know you are screwed... (Score:2)
According to the the guy who's maintaining the quiz [guardian.co.uk] it means:
"To know where to find anything is, after all, the greatest part of education."
I admit it's similar, but definitely more elegant.
Re:You know you are screwed... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:You know you are screwed... (Score:2)
Or, as Samuel Johnston put it:
uuh.. google (Score:5, Interesting)
And true enough quickly looking at the first section I was able to find answers to 9 withing few minutes... The last one would require probably few more minutes..
In a way it is strange how much information is searchable... and how the action of searching the web has taken over. Back when younger we were supposed to LEARN the history...:)
Re:uuh.. google (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:uuh.. google (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:uuh.. google (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:uuh.. google (Score:1)
Well, remember that history is written by the victors. So we should also learn about the small wars as well, and from the opposite side. Then we can get a much better perspective of what really happened instead of propaganda.
Re:uuh.. google (Score:2)
The minor points such as dates and who cooked apple cobler in maine on the second of november etc is pointless to memorize
I mostly agree with you, but I think the dates are not so minor as is often argued. After all, knowing the order in which things happened is pretty crucial for being able to understand them.
JP
Re:uuh.. google (Score:2)
Re:uuh.. google (Score:3)
I do concur with the thought of how information retrieval, atleast fot the first cut has changed.
Ofcourse if you want to actually be sure of something you still need to do proper study of the references.
Re:uuh.. google (Score:4, Interesting)
'Q2: How do you make the quiz Googleproof? "I do put the questions through Google, and change some to make it more unlikely that the answers will be thrown up immediately, but there is only so much I can do in that respect." Q3: What do you consider to be cheating? "There's nothing I would regard as cheating. If you want to do it entirely through Google, good luck. The only question is, will it reduce your pleasure if you do so?" That is, perhaps, the best question Cullen has posed so far, to which the correct answer is: "Yes." [guardian.co.uk]
also, in earlier years 'If you weren't sure of the answer to a question, but it had nothing to do with Bruges, Delft, Dickens or Austen, it was probably Queen Elizabeth.'
in even earlier years, success would be rewarded with half a pint.
I believe Alan Cox does this quiz every year.
Re:uuh.. google (Score:2)
Re:uuh.. google (Score:2)
(bar quizzes are too changing from cellphones and google..)
Re:uuh.. google (Score:2, Insightful)
In a way it is strange how much information is searchable... and how the action of searching the web has taken over. Back when younger we were supposed to LEARN the history...:)
Yes, but information retrieval is a necessary means to learning. Think of it this way: Back in the day,
(1) I probably never would have learned about this quiz because it's an esoteric test found in England.
(2) Even if I *had* learned about it, I never would have bothered to learn about the answers because it would have
Re:uuh.. google (Score:2)
As in current society the "quick answers" type thing is seen as more valuable than actual understand in WAY too many cases.
Re:uuh.. google - World Changing (Score:1)
The world may be changing to one where the flow of information is so rich and accessible that we need not remember all types of abstract facts and figures; we'll just look them up when we need them. With such a world of data at our fingertips at all times, our minds will be freed from hard data to concentrate on concepts and ideas through more objective thought processes. I wonder if such limitless access to information could eventually change the way people think, en
Re:uuh.. google - World Changing (Score:2)
Thus one would need the "base data" or call it framework to place the facts found from sources line google. If that framework is not there the facts will be meaningless or even too easy to forge.
Re:uuh.. google - World Changing (Score:2)
I would imagine that the traditional humanities-related fields would find this approach even more critical. With
Interesting post.. (Score:2, Interesting)
I was thinking if they made an Slashdot Quiz how would it be, I wonder?
Slashdot Quiz
1. What is Raistlin Majere's middle name?
2. Name 10 species that existed in Middle Earth.
3. If someone offends you with a post, should you a). Flame him b). Flame him c). Flame him.
4. Name the past 10 iterations of intel's processor.
etc...
Re:Interesting post.. (Further Questions) (Score:5, Funny)
6) What kind of cluster are you imagining right now?
7) In Korea, what demographic group is particularly special?
8) Who is Cowboy Neal?
9) What is the best material for covering Natalie Portman?
10) Can you trust your computer to this quiz without its digital signature?
Re:Interesting post.. (Further Questions) (Score:5, Insightful)
Saran wrap?
Re:Interesting post.. (Further Questions) (Score:3, Funny)
HOT GRITS
Re:Interesting post.. (Further Questions) (Score:2)
Re:Interesting post.. (Further Questions) (Score:1)
Re:Interesting post.. (Further Questions) (Score:2, Funny)
Before or after the hot grits?
Historical Background (Score:5, Informative)
Here [guardian.co.uk] is another Guardian article with some more information about the quiz, as opposed to the quiz itself, which is ridiculously hard. It tells a bit about the author (quizmaster) of the quiz and other bits of useful information like the fact that they take the quiz once before winter break and then once after winter break after having some time to prepare responses using any means available (including the Internet, which is one reason it has gotten harder in recent years -- the author wants to make sure that google is all but useless).
Anyway, I'd hate to have to take one of these, and the last thing I want to do over break is look up 180 obscure questions.
Re:Historical Background (Score:2)
Re:what's the answers to (Score:1)
Re:Historical Background (Score:2)
Jim Laker's record haul (Score:2)
Link here: http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport/hi/english/static/in_ d epth/cricket/2001/ashes/legends/laker.stm [bbc.co.uk] (Scroll down to 1956 Old Trafford).
BTW, if you don't play/watch cricket, that was some good deduction on your part. The four numbers represent a bowler's sta
Re:Jim Laker's record haul (Score:2)
Re:The answers are not clever (Score:3, Funny)
a: african or european?
test: I don't know arrrrrggggggggg
Re: (Score:1)
Why it is so difficult? (Score:1)
Guardian Says: "The King William's College quiz: It's 100 years old and it'll still outsmart you."
Hey, It's 100 years old and that's the one of the reasons it is so difficult.
How am I supposed to remember the 100 years old history? I can't even remember the syntax for crontab entries. Everytime I have to go through the man pages.
We're not really esoteric.. (Score:1)
Intellectual torture? (Score:1)
Better Quizzes (Score:1)
Peace,
Aleph
King William's College is NOT in the UK (Score:2, Informative)
Re:King William's College is NOT in the UK (Score:4, Informative)
Re:King William's College is NOT in the UK (Score:2)
Reminds me of the Get Fuzzy strip where Bucky tells Satchel that by describing soccer as exciting he meant it was "fall in a hole and wait for Lassie boring".
Re:King William's College is NOT in the UK (Score:1, Informative)
Abbas and Stoke (Score:2)
It's 100 years old and it'll still outsmart you. (Score:1)
New Jeporady Category (Score:5, Funny)
Re:New Jeporady Category (Score:2)
Re:I'm SO SMART (Score:1)
Dynamite not TNT.
Re:I'm SO SMART (Score:1)
But not smart enough... (Score:1)
FYI (Score:5, Informative)
Anyway, some information...
[1] KWC [kwc.sch.im] is not a 'college', really, despite its name. It's a primary and secondary boarding and school, these days, for boys and girls. (When I started there, it was male-only.)
[2] It's in the Isle of Man [isle-of-man.com] on the outskirts of the town of Castletown and the village of Ballasalla. This means it is not in the UK, strictly: the Isle of Man is an independant protectorate of the British crown. The Manx Tynwald is the oldest government in the world - 1,025 years of continuous rule.
Re:FYI (Score:1)
I've a question for the parent, and something of a riddle, so not entirely off-topic!
The Chairman of the Mathematical Institute at Oxford posed the question: which part of Great Britain is not part of the United Kingdom?
We both agreed that the Isle of Man is not in the UK, but it seems unclear whether or not it's in Britain. Do you know what the official answer is? Is the Isle of Man part of Great Britain?
Re:FYI (Score:2)
Sure it wasn't "Which part of the British Isles is not part of the United Kingdom"? - A: Eire and
Re:FYI (Score:2)
But it has always (well, since 1707 anyway) been part of the United Kingdom.
Re:FYI (Score:2)
Re:FYI (Score:1)
After a adolescence of Manx winters, I went for a stroll during the "Great Hurricane" of 1987 while at University in leafy Surrey. I thought there was a bit of a blow on, but nothing special - I'd walked the dog many times in far worse...
likewise (Score:1)
Seeing that RDF feed popping up in Evolution gave me a frisson, I was there.
Re:likewise (Score:1)
P.S. Hi, Adrian!
Re:FYI (Score:1)
Re:FYI (Score:1)
The college *NOT* the UK! (Score:3, Informative)
Since we're talking about my home (and a general knowledge quiz that eminates from there) I thought I ought to point this out.
Re:The college *NOT* the UK! (Score:2)
Re:The college *NOT* the UK! (Score:2)
Without googling... (Score:2)
8.5 M/V Esperanza.
9.5 Mt. Brandon (St. Brendan the Navigator, said to have discovered North America).
10.6 Einstein.
10.7 Orson Welles (Citizen Kane)
11.3 The burning of Rome (Nero).
11.10 The Chicago Fire.
14.7 John Brown ('s Body Lies a-Moldering...).
14.10 German WW1 storm troops, later the Nazi SA.
15.4 The time zone of the Republic of Kiribati.
15.8 A cherry picker.
17.5 Look before you leap.
rj
Re:Without googling... (Score:2)
1.8 St. Louis (Olympic Games)
12.9 Roger Bannister (4 minute mile)
18.9 Hurricane Charley (ok, I needed google for the name)
Re:Without googling... (Score:2)
rj
Obscure country (Score:1)