The first 3 that I haven't solved yet are 93, 94 and 100. 94 is a triangle problem! I think part of the problem is that I'm not used to reasoning about maths very much these days, so I can take a step or two and then hit a brick wall. But seriously don't put time into this that could be used preparing for your exam. I can wait.
So I solved 94! Thanks for the tip. In order to solve it I took your approach, and failed. I assume because not every n, n, n ± 1 forms a valid triangle and my filtering was obviously wrong. Using brute force feels wrong, but of course I do use that. It just seems like there must be a better approach and the large numbers in the questions are obviously there to discourage brute-force. My winning approach was to generate pythagorean triples (as I already had code to do just that) and use those which apply to the question. Although relatively slow (still < 1 minute) it got me into the forum which shows a couple of much faster, very direct approaches to the solution. Since lots of Euler questions involve solving for integers - often with 2 variables - I'd like to request an introduction to diophantine equations - and I keep coming across Pell's equation in the forums which looks like it's related. Once you've solved it you get a link to a forum topic for that question. There are usually lots of good advice in those. Ad. 93 ... I would love to get explanations and tips myself actually.