Okay, the Overlap Kit discussion went well enough... and Laurens was very fast to provide the image showing the shared components between retail versions 1.0 and 2.0.
So, here are four more challenges:
1. Add the LEGO Education Resource Set to Retail 1.0 and create an Overlap Kit with the Retail 2.0 kit
2. Add the LEGO Education Resource Set to Retail 2.0 and create an Overlap Kit with the Education Base Set
3. Add the Resource Set and Education Base Set together and create an Overlap Kit with the Retail 1.0 kit
4. Add the Resource Set and Education Base Set together and create an Overlap Kit with the Retail 2.0 kit
The goal here is to find out which kit(s), when combined with the Resource Set, provide the best variety of parts (or closest match) to another kit. Does that make sense? The way I'm thinking is this - if we can find the parts inventory that is shared between 1.0/ResSet and 2.0/ResSet, authors may have a reasonable amount of parts to create books that both 1.0 and 2.0 owners can build by purchasing the $80 Resource Set.
So, here are four more challenges:
1. Add the LEGO Education Resource Set to Retail 1.0 and create an Overlap Kit with the Retail 2.0 kit
2. Add the LEGO Education Resource Set to Retail 2.0 and create an Overlap Kit with the Education Base Set
3. Add the Resource Set and Education Base Set together and create an Overlap Kit with the Retail 1.0 kit
4. Add the Resource Set and Education Base Set together and create an Overlap Kit with the Retail 2.0 kit
The goal here is to find out which kit(s), when combined with the Resource Set, provide the best variety of parts (or closest match) to another kit. Does that make sense? The way I'm thinking is this - if we can find the parts inventory that is shared between 1.0/ResSet and 2.0/ResSet, authors may have a reasonable amount of parts to create books that both 1.0 and 2.0 owners can build by purchasing the $80 Resource Set.