Is every sufficiently large positive integer $A$ of the form $ab + ac + bc + 1$
where $a,b,c$ are some positive integers larger than some given positive integer $d$ ?
How large is sufficiently large , in other words how do we know our number $A$ is sufficiently large ( as a function of $d$ ) ?
Update :
I read the following about positive integers that are not of the form $ ab + ac + bc $:
And I quote about that sequence above : " Note that for n in this sequence, n+1 is either a prime, twice a prime, the square of a prime, 8 or 16 "
This is why I considered the weird +1 in $ab + ac + bc + 1$
So composites larger than 16 not a prime , twice a prime or the square of a prime are of the form $ab + ac + bc + 1$.
And I wonder why !
I guess that relates strongly to the Original posted problem. Maybe I should have mentioned that before , sorry.
Will Jagy's answer gave the same OEIS link which I already knew. This also explains some of the comments.
Im no expert in genus theory or Galois theory but I assume this has a simple answer.