http://www.siam.org/siamnews/01-02/challenge.pdf
http://web.comlab.ox.ac.uk/oucl/work/nick.trefethen/hundred.html
At the time of the original posting, Profs. Toby Driscoll and Lou Rossi were teaching graduate and undergraduate numerical analysis courses and sought to spark more interest in the topic by answering the challenge. Soon, other students in the department saw the problems and were drawn into the group. Thus, continuing education student Jonathan Leighton, undergraduate Eli Faulkner, and graduate students Carl DeVore, and Sven Reichard joined the core group. Interestingly, the only numerical analysts on the team were faculty advisors Driscoll and Rossi. Eli Faulkner is interested in topology. Graduate students DeVore and Reichard are candidates in the discrete mathematics group. Jon Leighton has a variety of interests in applied mathematics and solid mechanics.
The team quickly found that direct numerical attacks on several of the problems would require prohibitive amounts of CPU time. Some problems featured very slowly converging series or very large matrices. Other problems were dangerously close or beyond the limits of double precision arithmetic. While the team made heavy use of mathematical software including Maple and Matlab, it was insight and craftiness that transformed the inaccessible into the routine in almost every problem. In the end, all of the team's solutions required at most a few minutes of CPU time.