LinkedIn Pinpoint #662 Answer & Analysis 

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What connects Screwdriver, Drill, Horse (when bridled), Comedy sketch show and Computer memory (groups of 64) in LinkedIn Pinpoint 662 — and why? We've got you covered! Try the hints first — you might crack it before the reveal.

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Puzzle Number

662

Date

2026-02-21

LinkedIn Pinpoint 662 Clues & Answer
Pinpoint 662 Clues:

💡 Hover (desktop) or tap (mobile) each clue to see how it connects to the answer

#1
Screwdriver
#2
Drill
#3
Horse (when bridled)
#4
Comedy sketch show
#5
Computer memory (groups of 64)
Pinpoint 662 Answer:
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🔧 LinkedIn Pinpoint 662 Answer — Screwdriver, Drill, Horse (when bridled), Comedy sketch show, Computer memory (groups of 64)

Published: February 21, 2026 · Answer: Things with bits

This one had me chasing my tail. I started from the end — "Computer memory (groups of 64)" — and immediately thought about bytes, data, binary. Some kind of computing theme?

But then "Horse (when bridled)" made zero sense in a tech context. A horse? I briefly wondered if this was about things with "drives" — hard drive, horse-driven carriage? That felt like a stretch.

"Comedy sketch show" threw me even further off. SNL? Monty Python? I couldn't connect comedy to horses to computers.

I went back to "Screwdriver" and "Drill." Tools, sure. But what do tools, horses, comedy, and computers share? Then it hit me — bits. A drill bit. A screwdriver bit. A horse's bit in its bridle. A comedy bit. And a computer bit (64-bit memory).

The word "bit" is hiding in every single clue, but each one uses it completely differently. That's the beauty of this puzzle — it exploits a single word's wildly different meanings across unrelated domains.

Once I saw it, I couldn't unsee it. Five totally different "bits," five totally different worlds. English is a weird language.

✅ Pinpoint 662 Answer

Things with bits

ClueFull PhraseWhat It Means
ScrewdriverScrewdriver bitHas a removable bit that fits into the screw head for turning
DrillDrill bitUses drill bits to bore holes in various materials
Horse (when bridled)Horse bitThe bit is the metal mouthpiece attached to the bridle for control
Comedy sketch showComedy bitConsists of short comedy bits or sketches performed by actors
Computer memory (groups of 64)64-bit computingOrganized in groups of bits, with 64 bits being a common size

🎯 Takeaways

  1. Think in homonyms. When clues span wildly different categories — tools, horses, comedy, computers — a shared word with multiple meanings is almost certainly the link. I wasted time trying to find a thematic connection when the answer was a single English word ("bit") used five completely different ways.
  2. Parenthetical clues decode the connection. "(when bridled)" tells you exactly which part of the horse matters, and "(groups of 64)" points to computing bits. These parentheticals aren't flavor text — they're the puzzle literally spelling out the answer word. Always read them first.
  3. Don't get stuck in one domain. I saw "Computer memory" and locked into a tech mindset, which made "Horse" and "Comedy" feel like nonsense. The fix: when a new clue breaks your theory, don't force it — step back and ask "what single word could connect ALL of these?"

FAQ

Q1: How many meanings does the word "bit" have in English? The word "bit" has over a dozen distinct meanings in English, including a small piece, a unit of information, a tool component, a horse's mouthpiece, a comedy routine, and a monetary unit (two bits = 25 cents).

Q2: Why are computer bits grouped in 64s? Modern processors use 64-bit architecture, meaning they process data in chunks of 64 binary digits. This allows addressing over 16 exabytes of memory, a massive leap from earlier 32-bit systems.

Q3: What is a horse bit made of? Horse bits are typically made of stainless steel, copper, or sweet iron. The metal bar sits in the gap between the horse's front and back teeth, allowing the rider to communicate through the reins.

Q4: Is this puzzle about literal bits or the word "bit"? Both! Each clue describes something that literally contains or uses a "bit" — whether it's a physical tool bit, a data bit, or a performance bit. The answer celebrates the word's versatility.

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