oc("Implicit information","Sathyaraj: this article was \"fucking\" good..i was reading a book called fooled by randomness and i just could relate to the way you and the author went about writing this.. can you write more about monte carlo simulation too?? and how it is used in finance...","sathyaraj@gmail.com"); oc("Implicit information","Vasanth: Very interesting post! New insight for me into puzzles. I had always realized, but never analyzed, that I never give up when it comes to puzzles and brain teasers. On the contrary I give up relatively easily with some technical or work related problem the minute it appears probable that a (reasonable) solution does not exist.","lonewolf_av@yahoo.com"); oc("Implicit information","S Anand: @Sathyaraj: Thanks! The sequel to \"Fooled by Randomness\" is pretty good to: \"The Black Swan\". @Vasanth: Another big problem, if you ask me, is that the problem is unbounded. In puzzles, you have a test case to determine whether you've solved it or not. In life, you aren't often sure.","root.node@gmail.com"); oc("Implicit information","Jayanth Sankar: Hey I like your posts. Pretty good. The question about the money between the two brothers.. I have a doubt here.. you had mentioned number of 1 dollar notes should be less than 10 dollar notes, so then 16 wont work right ? 1 - $ 10 and 6 - $1... what am I missing ?","jayanths@umich.edu");