Erno Rubik, born on 13 July 1944, in Budapest,
Hungary, is the inventor of Rubik’s Cube, a popular toy of the 1980s. Rubik’s Cube consists of 26 small
cubes that rotate on a central axis; nine coloured cube faces, in three rows of
three each, form each side of the cube. When the cube is twisted out of its
original arrangement, the player must then return it to the original
configuration, one among 43 quintillion possible ones.
The son of a poet mother and a glider-manufacturer father,
Rubik studied sculpture at the Technical University in Budapest and
architecture at the Academy of Applied Arts and Design, also in Budapest. While
a professor of design at the academy, he pursued his hobby of building
geometric models. One of these was a prototype of his cube, made of 27 wooden
blocks; it took Rubik a month to solve the problem of the cube. It proved a
useful tool for teaching algebraic group theory, and in late 1977 Konsumex, Hungary’s
state trading company, began marketing it. By 1980 Rubik’s Cube was marketed
throughout the world, and over 100 million authorized units, with an estimated
50 million unauthorized imitations, were sold, mostly during its subsequent
three years of popularity. Approximately 50 books were published describing how
to solve the puzzle of Rubik’s Cube. Following his cube’s
popularity, Rubik opened a studio to develop designs in 1984; among its
products was another popular puzzle toy, Rubik’s Magic.
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