Horror Business
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i know this seems simple, and perhaps it's a trick, but I'm confused! is the answer 100?
Horror Business said:i know this seems simple, and perhaps it's a trick, but I'm confused! is the answer 100?
Horror Business said:i know this seems simple, and perhaps it's a trick, but I'm confused! is the answer 100?
tribdog said:how many mice can one cat eat in 100 minutes? 1 cat eats 100/3 mice. 100mice/(100/3micepercat)=3cats
tribdog said:I didn't think of the cat vomiting.
vikasj007 said:but still i think that it possible for three extremely large cats,( maybe, lions) to eat 33 1/3 mice without vomiting.
so, it was not such an unrealistic problem after all.
RandallB said:Four or more Cats
3 cats would eat 99 mice in 99 minutes.
Only one cat would be able to get the the last one and would not be able to eat it within the remaining one minute.
So it would take 4 or more cats to eat 100 mice "in" (within) 100 minutes.
RB![]()
Rogerio said:Well, after 99 mice, the cats won't be so hungry, and will peacefully share the last one.
So, its going to take only 3 cats to do the job :-)
phreak said:And I simple got 3334
I hope alive they don't eat so well when they're dead.Gokul43201 said:Or are those Schrodinger's cats ?
String theory doesn't really work with cats - they just run around in circles playing with any bits of string they find, a complete waste of time without producing any productive result.RandallB said:Are you using String theory
Office_Shredder said:but it's obvious nonna you've been in the field. You give me two cats, a half pound o' catnip, a blender, a vacuum with a reverse setting and a six foot to a side cube, and those cats'll polish off the mice in a half hour tops.
I like Serena said:You're all reading the question wrong.
3 cats eat 3 mice in 3 minutes, so each cat eats 1 mouse in 1 minute.
The answer is that 1 cat eats 100 mice in 100 minutes.
This must be the proper answer, because the other interpretation leaves us with a 1/3 mouse that gives ambiguity in the answer and a solution should not be ambiguous.
dextercioby said:They're supposed to eat at the same time. :D
I like Serena said:I thought each cat had 3 mice to eat, making a total of 9 mice.
The wording of the question does not seem to prohibit that.
That is: 3 cats eat 3 mice (each) in 3 minutes.
DaleSpam said:So it is 3 cat-minutes per mouse, which means 300 cat-minutes for 100 mice. To accomplish 300 cat-minutes of work in 100 minutes requires 3 cats working in principle. However, this is not taking into account the overhead required for team meetings, paperwork, and management, so you need a manager, an extra worker, and a secretary cat for a total of 6 cats. Of course, while one of these expert cats may eat one mouse in 3 minutes for very little reward eating 2 mice in 6 minutes requires more incentives and 3 mice in 9 minutes even more. What is more is that the incentives become much more expensive as the number of mice in a single shift increases. The company had to hire a financial cat to determine the best allocation of resources, and he determined that after 4 mice the incentives become too expensive, so about 25 cats are needed. Now, in principle 25 cats could accomplish the job in about 12 minutes, leaving each cat 88 minutes to spare. So the original manager cat was promoted to upper management decided to recruit "working managers" from within the pool of worker cats and have the worker cats take on most of the additional paperwork requirements that such a large workforce generates. So the final tally is 28 cats.
Good point, I figured that cats wouldn't have a union, being cats, but I didn't consider lobbies and regulations.jarednjames said:If these are British cats then with an expansion of such magnitude you'd be looking at having at least one HSE executive on top of that. Wouldn't want to get sued for violating safe working practices now would you.
DaleSpam said:So it is 3 cat-minutes per mouse, which means 300 cat-minutes for 100 mice. To accomplish 300 cat-minutes of work in 100 minutes requires 3 cats working in principle. However, this is not taking into account the overhead required for team meetings, paperwork, and management, so you need a manager, an extra worker, and a secretary cat for a total of 6 cats. Of course, while one of these expert cats may eat one mouse in 3 minutes for very little reward eating 2 mice in 6 minutes requires more incentives and 3 mice in 9 minutes even more. What is more is that the incentives become much more expensive as the number of mice in a single shift increases. The company had to hire a financial cat to determine the best allocation of resources, and he determined that after 4 mice the incentives become too expensive, so about 25 cats are needed. Now, in principle 25 cats could accomplish the job in about 12 minutes, leaving each cat 88 minutes to spare. So the original manager cat was promoted to upper management decided to recruit "working managers" from within the pool of worker cats and have the worker cats take on most of the additional paperwork requirements that such a large workforce generates. So the final tally is 28 cats.
jarednjames said:No, if it meant each it would have said each. That completely changes the question.
DaleSpam said:So it is 3 cat-minutes per mouse, which means 300 cat-minutes for 100 mice. To accomplish 300 cat-minutes of work in 100 minutes requires 3 cats working in principle. However, this is not taking into account the overhead required for team meetings, paperwork, and management, so you need a manager, an extra worker, and a secretary cat for a total of 6 cats. Of course, while one of these expert cats may eat one mouse in 3 minutes for very little reward eating 2 mice in 6 minutes requires more incentives and 3 mice in 9 minutes even more. What is more is that the incentives become much more expensive as the number of mice in a single shift increases. The company had to hire a financial cat to determine the best allocation of resources, and he determined that after 4 mice the incentives become too expensive, so about 25 cats are needed. Now, in principle 25 cats could accomplish the job in about 12 minutes, leaving each cat 88 minutes to spare. So the original manager cat was promoted to upper management decided to recruit "working managers" from within the pool of worker cats and have the worker cats take on most of the additional paperwork requirements that such a large workforce generates. So the final tally is 28 cats.
I like Serena said:How do you know?
If the question had been stated properly, it would read either:
A. 3 cats eat a total of 3 mice in 3 minutes, ...
B. 3 cats eat 3 mice each in 3 minutes, ...
As it is, I believe the semantics allow for either interpretation.
Horror Business said:i know this seems simple, and perhaps it's a trick, but I'm confused! is the answer 100?