On Mar 3, 2006, at 16:41, Ryan Heise wrote:
>
> We have discussed memorising a cube using numbers, sentences and  
> cards.
> Why not memorise the direct visual imagery that we get by looking  
> at the
> cube?

That's what I do. I haven't completed a full solve yet so who cares.  
But I hear Leyan does that as well. That's Leno-Leyan. Haven't heard  
what Letterman-Leyan uses.

The orientations lend themselves quite nicely to immediate  
visualization. Permutations no doubt require more work and  
experience, since you can't just look at one piece in isolation and  
know what to do with it, you're memorizing relations between pieces.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
"Build a man a fire, and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire,  
and he'll be warm for the rest of his life."
                                 --- Terry Pratchett

Lars Petrus - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lar5.com



 
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