Hello lovely peeps,
How are you all? Has it been a good week? Lots of smiles? I've had a good week and I'll tell you all about it, but first let's look at my postcard first:
Hello lovely peeps,
How are you all? Has it been a good week? Lots of smiles? I've had a good week and I'll tell you all about it, but first let's look at my postcard first:
Hello lovely peeps,
What a lovely week this has been! I have lots to show you so let me crack on with my postcard:
Linn's Stamp News writes: In the mid-1970s, Rubik was a teacher at Budapest’s Academy of Applied Arts and Crafts in the Department of Interior Design. Although most accounts of the toy’s creation suggest that Rubik built the cube as a teaching tool to help his students understand three-dimensional objects, his actual intent was to create a device with moving sectional parts in an attempt to solve the structural problem of moving those parts independently without comprising the integrity of the entire mechanism.
At the time, Rubik didn’t realize he had created an imaginative logic toy until the first time he scrambled the various sections of the cube and tried to restore them to their original positions.
On Jan. 30, 1975, Rubik applied for a patent in Hungary for his “Magic Cube,” receiving the patent later that year on Dec. 31.
In the years since its creation, the toy has become an international phenomenon, reaching the height of its popularity in the 1980s, and is estimated to have entertained more than 1 billion users. Even today worldwide competitions are held in which entrants are timed in their efforts to unscramble the squares of the device.
The Hungarian Conservative published this on 03-02-2025: Celebrating 50 Years of the Rubik’s Cube and Ernő Rubik’s 80th Birthday in New York
A new exhibition, Rubik 80/50 — Fifty Years of Magic, has opened in New York’s TriBeCa district. Celebrating 50 years of the Rubik’s Cube and its inventor Ernő Rubik’s 80th birthday, the exhibit offers a dynamic journey through the legacy of a global icon.