If you want to see if your run could have been optimized, Six Degrees of Wikipedia is a neat tool for that. https://www.sixdegreesofwikipedia.com/
Copilot still works quite poorly with problems that are not “Stackoverflowable”. Perhaps the best way to fight this is to create assignments that cannot be googled in 5 seconds.
Me too. I used to cube in my teens. All my record solves were basically due to RNG, i.e. lucky scrambles. The average of 5 is a much more useful metric, if we’re looking at who is the fastest solver.
If you want to see if your run could have been optimized, Six Degrees of Wikipedia is a neat tool for that. https://www.sixdegreesofwikipedia.com/
Copilot still works quite poorly with problems that are not “Stackoverflowable”. Perhaps the best way to fight this is to create assignments that cannot be googled in 5 seconds.
Me too. I used to cube in my teens. All my record solves were basically due to RNG, i.e. lucky scrambles. The average of 5 is a much more useful metric, if we’re looking at who is the fastest solver.