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You are a contestant on ‘Pick A Box’, and have won your way through to the final round.

Pick_a_box

“As our champion of the night, you get the chance to win our major prize – a brand new Holden!  Pick a door, and the prize behind it is yours” says the host, Bob Dyer.

There are three doors – behind one of them is a car, and behind each of the other two doors is a goat.

The organs plays some thinking music, the audience call out suggestions, and you pick door number 1.

Bob is a pro, and knows how to build suspense. “Our champ has picked door number 1. Dolly, let’s see what he would have won if had picked door number 3”, he says.

The room is silent. Bob’s glamorous assistant Dolly slides opens Door Number 3. The audience gasps. A goat stands quietly behind it, chewing it’s cud.

(Bob knows what’s behind all the door. Every night he opens another door, and every night it reveals a goat)

“Now champ”, says Bob. “You have a choice. You can stick with your original selection, or change to Door Number 2. What’ll it be – stick or change”

What should you do? Which option gives you the best chance of winning – switching, staying, or is it 50:50 whatever you do.

This ‘Monty Hall Problem’ was first posed by Steven Selvin in 1975, and received widespread publicity when it featured in Parade Magazine in 1990. (Monty Hall was the original host of the US “Let’s Make a Deal”. He was therefore their version of our own Bob Dyer)

Here’s a clue. The correct answer is famously counter-intuitive. 90% of people answer incorrectly. 10000 people wrote to Parade magazine saying that the author of the article had made a mistake, and 1000 of these had a PhD. Yet the solution is simple.

One of the options gives double the chance of the other!

When you’re ready to decide, read the explanation on Wikipedia.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Hall_problem

The Sydney University Football Club Puzzle is a variation on the Monty Hall Problem, but remains unexplained by mathematicians and scientists. Australia’s oldest Rugby club has been raffling the same bottle of Scotch at home games for at least 30 years, and possibly since the formation of the club in 1863. Yet despite the hundreds of tickets that are sold every week, no one ever seems to hold the winning number. Perhaps the current custodian of the bottle, Andrew C, can explain this mystery.

Pick-A-Box started on Sydney radio 2GB in 1948, and made the transition to television in 1957. It was a stalwart of Australian viewing until 1971!

I’ve always wondered why Barry Jones became famous as a contestant on the show. It turns out that he was more than just a contestant – he won 208 episodes between 1960 and 1967! Of course, he went on to become a minister in the Hawke government and president of the Australian Labor Party.

You can watch Episode 170, featuring Barry Jones, in the Australian screen archives

Take the money, Barry

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Working out which mobile phone plan is best for you is not rocket science – its much more complicated than that.

Australian site WhistleOut has taken out their slide rules and produced this ‘infogram’ demonstrating how many minutes of call time you get with each of the various deals available. They have assumed an average call time of 3 minutes, and ignored SMS for this graph.

If you want a more individualised comparison you can check out the other tools on their site, or ask your nearest boy genius.

Australian
Source WhistleOut

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You’re not the worst parent in the whole world, even if you’re the only one who won’t let your teenager go to the party.

Teenagers

Michelle Mitchell is a former teacher who has recently published the book “What Teenage Girls Don’t Tell Their Parents”. She was interviewed on Life Matters yesterday.

http://www.abc.net.au/rn/lifematters/stories/2011/3265125.htm

One of the foundational things that teenage girls stop telling their parents is that they love them. The positive feedback “Mummy I Love You” suddenly disappears – our daughters become masters of criticism.

As often stated, Mitchell says it is not the parents job to be the teenagers best friend. Teenagers are not mini-adults – you still need to practice ‘deliberate parenting’.

Parents no longer know what’s going on – in the past, phone calls came to the house. With mobile phones, teens are directly connected to each other.

Mitchell says it can be harder for parents to stay connected to their teenage daughter’s ‘inside stories’, beneath the cover that is displayed to the world. Be prepared to see past the cover that says “I hate you” to what’s happening inside.

“You’re jobs not to trust them, but protect them”. When Michelle asks teenagers would they trust themselves, they look at her like she is a moron.

Teenagers peer relationships are temptuous. Parents need to be the one place where there is consistent love and consistent rules.

Mitchell says you will not know everything that happens to your daughters – but remember that knowing will not change how you parent. You need to know when to let things go.

As your daughters hit the speed bump of teenage years and fly off on a wild ride, remember that the cure for 13 is 14. And the cure for 14 is 15.

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Life Matters had a debate on Complementary and Alternative Therapies today. Over half of the Australian population uses some form of complementary or alternative medicine and it costs us around 2 billion dollars to do so

http://www.abc.net.au/rn/lifematters/stories/2011/3264377.htm

This brings to mind Mitchell and Webb’s documentary on the dilemmas faced in the Homeopathic A&E

“Sometime I think a trace solution of deadly nightshade or a statistically negligible quantity of arsenic isn’t enough”

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Those Dutch sure think of everything.

P-tree

Planning a festival or party? The last thing you want is people peeing on your trees.

You need Dutch firm Aandeboom’s new product, the P_Tree

The P-tree is a temporary tree-friendly urinal that can be fixed on every tree using straps and lashings. The P-tree gives a feeling of freedom during peeing. It is the same as peeing into the wild. The hoses from the urinal can be combined and connected on a waste pipe with container. The P-tree is very accessible for festivals, public gardens, events, etc. P-tree and Lashings are available in different RAL-colors.

Now, the only question is – what colour do you need?

P-tree_5

 

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