Mark Brader:
> These questions were written to be asked in Toronto on 2007-03-26,
> and should be interpreted accordingly... For further information...
> see my 2020-06-23 companion posting on "Reposted Questions from the
> Canadian Inquisition (RQFTCI*)".
> I wrote most of one of these rounds, and one question in the other.
That was the history round and the last literature question.
> * Game 10, Round 7 - Literature - Boxed Sets
> Perfect for gift-giving, here are ten literary trilogies or
> tetralogies. In each case we name a single volume, and you
> identify the boxed set -- that is, the complete work.
> 1. "Il Paradiso".
"The Divine Comedy" or "La Divina Commedia" (by Dante Alighieri).
4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Dan Tilque.
> 2. "The Two Towers".
"The Lord of the Rings" (by J.R.R. Tolkien). 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua,
Dan Tilque, and Pete.
> 3. "Fifth Business".
The Deptford trilogy (by Robertson Davies).
> 4. "The Rebel Angels".
The Cornish trilogy (again, by Robertson Davies).
> 5. "Titus Groan".
"Gormenghast" (by Mervyn Peake). 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua,
and Dan Tilque.
> 6. "The Jewel in the Crown".
The Raj Quartet (by Paul Scott). 4 for Joshua.
> 7. "Palace Walk".
The Cairo trilogy (by Naguib Mahfouz).
> 8. "Oedipus Rex" (or "Oedipus the King").
The Theban trilogy (by Sophocles). 4 for Dan Blum and Joshua.
> 9. "Agamemnon".
The "Oresteia" (by Aeschylus). 4 for Joshua.
> 10. "The Subtle Knife".
"His Dark Materials" (by Philip Pullman). 4 for Dan Blum and Joshua.
In the original game question 10 asked about William Kennedy's
"Ironweed", but the Albany Cycle is now up to 9 books if Wikipedia is
correct. I decided the simplest thing was to swap in a new question.
> * Game 10, Round 8 - History - Web-Site Founders
> This is, of course, the history round. In all cases, short-form
> answers are fine; don't bother with "www" or ".com" or "Ltd." or
> "Inc." or whatever.
"!" was't needed either.
> 1. This web site began as an online mailing list started by Craig
> Newmark in San Francisco in 1995.
Craigslist. 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Dan Tilque.
> 2. This project incorporated data that volunteers had been
> assembling and posting to a Usenet newsgroup for about 5 years
> when it became a web site in 1993, first based at Cardiff
> University. Col Needham took the lead and soon became the
> company's president, while Rob Hartill designed the first
> web interface.
IMDB (Internet Movie Database). 4 for Joshua and Dan Tilque.
> 3. Pierre Omidyar invented this web site in 1995; Jeff Skoll was
> the first president of the company. The peculiar name of the
> site comes from a previous company owned by Omidyar.
EBay (from Echo Bay). 4 for Dan Blum, Joshua, and Dan Tilque.
> 4. Sergey Brin and the aptly-named Larry Page founded what web
> company at Stanford University in 1998?
Google. 4 for everyone -- Dan Blum, Joshua, Dan Tilque, Erland,
and Pete.
> 5. This web site was started by Jerry Yang and David Filo in 1994,
> also at Stanford; the company was incorporated the following
> year.
Yahoo!. 4 for Joshua and Pete.
> 6. Mark Zuckerberg founded this site at Harvard University in 2004,
> originally intending it for college students only; Andrew
> McCollum contributed and Eduardo Saverin supplied funding.
(The) Facebook. 4 for everyone.
> 7. This web site was founded in 2001. After Larry Sanger parted
> company with it the following year, Jimmy (or "Jimbo") Wales was
> accused of changing history to call himself its sole founder.
> How appropriate. (Be sufficiently specific.)
Wikipedia (accepting Wikimedia, but not "Wiki"). 4 for everyone.
> 8. Jeff Bezos founded this Seattle-based company, which started
> operations in 1995 and made him "Time" magazine's Man of the
> Year in 1999 -- although the company did not become profitable
> until 2002.
Amazon. 4 for everyone.
> 9. People associated with this web site, """now""" owned by
> News Corp., say that it was founded in 2003 by Tom Anderson
> and Chris DeWolfe; others tell a different story.
MySpace (now owned by Meredith Corp.). 4 for Joshua.
> 10. Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim founded this site in
> 2005; Time magazine proclaimed *it* their "*Invention* of
> the Year" in 2006. It """is now""" owned by another company
> mentioned in this round.
YouTube (owned by Google; still true). 4 for Joshua and Erland.
Scores, if there are no errors:
GAME 10 ROUNDS-> 2 3 4 6 7 8 BEST
TOPICS-> Mis Ent Spo Can Lit His FOUR
Joshua Kreitzer 36 28 28 20 28 40 132
Dan Blum 28 12 24 28 20 24 104
Dan Tilque 15 0 24 28 12 28 95
Pete Gayde 8 12 36 16 4 20 84
Stephen Perry 40 36 -- -- -- -- 76
Erland Sommarskog -- -- 8 0 0 20 28
--
Mark Brader | The chief use to which we put our love of the truth is
Toronto | in persuading ourselves that what we love is true.
m...@vex.net | -- Pierre Nicole, c.1675