Posted on 11/23/2012 7:43:21 PM PST by Daffynition
Even Buckwheat did not speak Ebonics.
hee hee hee
Someone once wrote that the codemaker’s chief weapon is guile.
27 five-letter groups, of 135 characters, long enough to succumb to a skilled codebreaker. I’m not one. The first group of five and the last are identical, hmm.
AOAKNHVPKDFNFJWYIDDCRQXSRDJHFPGOVFNMIAPXPABUZWYYNPCMPNWHJRZHNLXKGMEMKKONOIBAKEEQWAOTARBQRHDJOFMTPZEHLKXGHRGGHTJRZCQFNKTQKLDTSFQIRWAOAKN
alphabetical:
AAAAAAAAABBBCCCDDDDDDEEEEFFFFFFFGGGGGHHHHHHHHIIIIJJJJJKKKKKKKKKKLLLMMMMMNNNNNNNNNOOOOOOOPPPPPPPQQQQQQRRRRRRRRSSTTTTTUVVWWWWWXXXXYYYZZZZ
Every letter is used, with the uncommon letters showing up it decent numbers, suggesting (not proving) that it’s a single-layer substitution cipher. There’s only one instance of U, but it’s a short message. Here’s an example frequency table:
E T A O N I S H R L D U C M W Y F G P B V K J X Q Z
Here’s another one:
http://library.thinkquest.org/28005/flashed/thelab/cryptograms/frequency.shtml
It sais “Bush’s Fault”
Some of the groups are obvious place holders, and the message reads:
Pound pastrami, can kraut, six bagelsbring home for Emma.
We believe this to be an embedded code, rather than the message itself. Dan Brown is doing further research on it.
BTW, is that a pic of The Maltese Pigeon?
Yep
:(
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