please don't ask a single question (i.e. mathoverflow page) with several 'actual questions' on it. Ask separate mathoverflow questions for each sub-problem. Remember, questions should be as specific as possible (but not more so!) and you should ask every question with an earnest hope of being able to accept a single answer that you feel makes any other answers redundant.
(You'll notice that this desideratum makes all [big-list] questions bad questions, but I think that's compatible with my view of [big-list] questions! :-)
]]>Any good polymath question immediately presents several sub-problems (in fact, hopefully a whole hierarchy of them) which are more tractable. This suggests a compromise approach: give the overview in blog format, and then farm out the minor problems to MO. The MO questions can refer back to the blog overview. If you actually announce the problem as a polymath problem, then you should also tag all the corresponding questions appropriately. Have a look at the [polymath5] tag, which already exists.
As you've stated it though (asking whether your methods might work), it doesn't sound exactly like "polymath". A good polymath project should already have a well motivated approach, and involve other people in tackling all the resulting sub-problems that that approach entails.
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