Bold Seagull
strong and stable with me, or...
50% isnt it - you are either right or wrong.
If 50% is the right answer, what are your chances of picking 50%!?
50% isnt it - you are either right or wrong.
If anyone can explain the answer to this, I'd be grateful. It's been bugging me for ages now...
This is an old one....
You're on a game show and the host shows you three doors (A,B and C), behind two of the doors is a goat, behind the third is a car. He asks you to choose a door and you choose (for example) door A.
The host opens door B and shows you a goat (he will always show you a goat behind one of the other doors).
He give's you the option of sticking with Door A or changing to Door C.
Do you stick or change and what are the probabilities that your dealing with?
Where's the question? It's a play on words isn't it, not numbers.
Surely the only possible answer could be 50%. Whether you stick with Door A or switch to Door C you still have a 50/50 chance of opening the correct door after Door B has been opened.
Surely the only possible answer could be 50%. Whether you stick with Door A or switch to Door C you still have a 50/50 chance of opening the correct door after Door B has been opened.
Or more likely 33.33% if equal chance of answer being 25%, 50% or 60%.
Surely the only possible answer could be 50%. Whether you stick with Door A or switch to Door C you still have a 50/50 chance of opening the correct door after Door B has been opened.
How about this one?
Me and my two flat mates were after a decent big new telly for the flat, and a mate of ours said he had seen a peach of an LED full HD 32 inch for exactly £300, and he could pick it up for us on his way home from work next day.
So in the pub that night we each gave him £100, so he could go out and buy the £300 TV.
He went to the shop, and to his delight the price had been reduced even further, to just £250. He obviously thought he would keep quiet about this further discount and pocket the £50 himself.
But his conscience got the better of him, so when he delivered the telly to us he said he got it for £250. And as £50wasn't easily divisible by 3 he said "how about I give you £10 back each, and I keep the other £20 for my trouble, time and petrol money?". And we all thought 'fair enough, he's done us a proper good turn here'.
So at the end of the day, we had each given him £100, but he had given each of us a tenner back. So each of us had parted with £90. Three times £90 is £270, add on the £20 he kept for himself, makes £290.
Hang on a minute, so where's the other tenner gone?
This is an old one....
You're on a game show and the host shows you three doors (A,B and C), behind two of the doors is a goat, behind the third is a car. He asks you to choose a door and you choose (for example) door A.
The host opens door B and shows you a goat (he will always show you a goat behind one of the other doors).
He give's you the option of sticking with Door A or changing to Door C.
Do you stick or change and what are the probabilities that your dealing with?