@cuong_lac22: Côn đảo 2026 #condao #vairal

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Sunday 05 July 2026 13:55:37 GMT
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The Tower of Hanoi is a mathematical puzzle involving a platform with three pegs and a series of discs arranged from largest at the bottom to smallest at the top. The goal is usually to move all the discs from the left peg to the right peg. But there are a few rules: only one disc may be moved at a time, only smaller discs can be placed on top of larger ones, and only the top disc of a stack can be moved. At this point, you might be tempted to ask: what does this have to do with Hanoi, or Vietnam, for that matter? To answer that, we need to trace the game back to its origins, which many attribute to Édouard Lucas, a 19th-century French mathematician with a fondness for puzzles. It’s believed that Lucas invented the game, which became commercially available in 1883. “The Tower of Hanoï - Authentic Brain Teaser of the Anamites - A game brought back from Tonkin,” reads the puzzle’s promotional material. The marketing credits the inventor as “Professor N. Claus (of Siam), Mandarin of the College of Li-Sou-Stian.” The name N. Claus de Siam is simply an anagram of Lucas d’Amiens, with Amiens being the French hometown of Édouard Lucas. Li-Sou-Stian, meanwhile, is an anagram of Saint Louis, the school where he taught. The rest of the promotional text seems to be an exercise in enthusiastic Orientalism, with the author cramming in as many eastern references as possible, perhaps in a bid to capitalize on the exoticism of a barely explored Far East in the 1880s. Considering the hodgepodge of Asian places mentioned, maybe it was only by coincidence that Hanoi made it into the official name. In fact, the only scenario where the Tower of Hanoi is truly related to Vietnam might be if the discs themselves were made of bún chả patties. Regardless of the game’s origins, its popularity has never waned, both as a children’s toy and as a recreational mathematical brainteaser. The puzzle has appeared in a number of pop culture works, including TV series like Doctor Who and Survivor, as well as RPG titles like Mass Effect, Dragon Age and Genshin Impact. ___ Written by Khôi Phạm. Video via GeeksforGeeks.
The Tower of Hanoi is a mathematical puzzle involving a platform with three pegs and a series of discs arranged from largest at the bottom to smallest at the top. The goal is usually to move all the discs from the left peg to the right peg. But there are a few rules: only one disc may be moved at a time, only smaller discs can be placed on top of larger ones, and only the top disc of a stack can be moved. At this point, you might be tempted to ask: what does this have to do with Hanoi, or Vietnam, for that matter? To answer that, we need to trace the game back to its origins, which many attribute to Édouard Lucas, a 19th-century French mathematician with a fondness for puzzles. It’s believed that Lucas invented the game, which became commercially available in 1883. “The Tower of Hanoï - Authentic Brain Teaser of the Anamites - A game brought back from Tonkin,” reads the puzzle’s promotional material. The marketing credits the inventor as “Professor N. Claus (of Siam), Mandarin of the College of Li-Sou-Stian.” The name N. Claus de Siam is simply an anagram of Lucas d’Amiens, with Amiens being the French hometown of Édouard Lucas. Li-Sou-Stian, meanwhile, is an anagram of Saint Louis, the school where he taught. The rest of the promotional text seems to be an exercise in enthusiastic Orientalism, with the author cramming in as many eastern references as possible, perhaps in a bid to capitalize on the exoticism of a barely explored Far East in the 1880s. Considering the hodgepodge of Asian places mentioned, maybe it was only by coincidence that Hanoi made it into the official name. In fact, the only scenario where the Tower of Hanoi is truly related to Vietnam might be if the discs themselves were made of bún chả patties. Regardless of the game’s origins, its popularity has never waned, both as a children’s toy and as a recreational mathematical brainteaser. The puzzle has appeared in a number of pop culture works, including TV series like Doctor Who and Survivor, as well as RPG titles like Mass Effect, Dragon Age and Genshin Impact. ___ Written by Khôi Phạm. Video via GeeksforGeeks.

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