... Hmm, now what was it that Artur Ekert told us at the Oxford Conference in June 2000? I thought he said they'd (then) just done something like this between...
In a message dated 4/1/02 3:57:06 PM, TJFROGGATT@... writes: << I've not seen the "Discover" magazine article, so I'd like to know, does it give any...
Crack the cipher and get out. DJ ... __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Tax Center - online filing with TurboTax ...
... Center ... of ... the ... OK, now I've seen the Discover article, I understand the difference. The Los Alamos experiment was 6 miles through the...
You could always contact the guy who registered the domain - Ninichuck, Steven sninichuck@... 1273-C State Route 125 Hamersville, Ohio 45130 United...
owen@...
Apr 11, 2002 12:38 pm
5886
I'm doing Electrica with my friend who's better than me with cipheranalysis.. I can do Sokoban's and the computer related challenges pretty well tho :)...
Hi, I was thinking of making a computer program to solve some codes for a assignment at university. Since I solved a few of the ones here a long time ago, I...
... Yes, 0.065 is fine. Keep in mind also 0.038 for random, and if you see something in between (e.g. 0.05), suspect something is going on in there. ... You...
... I should add that this method was suggested to me by Bill Mason (BION in the American Cryptogram Association). I'd tried a number of approaches including...
I just logged onto egroups for the first time in months (maybe more than 12 of them?) and was pleasantly surprised to find that this group is still active, and...
Hi Phil, Nice to hear from you. John Lobert recently pointed out an entertaining puzzle site ( http://www.caesum.com/game/index.php ) which I think is a...
Just read an article about an international spy museum its going to be in Washinton DC and open this summer. It is going to contain various code/cipher...
Hi all, back when many people were writing playfair code solvers using genetic algorithms and who knows what else, was any consensus reached as to what the...
... solvers ... consensus ... probably measure ... more, ... I am probably not the best person to answer this, but since I'm working on the same problem now...
Hi Richard, You weren't kidding about it being addictive, were you :-P The problems seem really well prepared; it's been refreshing to get the old calculus and...
Phil and other poor suckers who have been drawn in the Electrica challenges: I have created a new group for our use. You may share information and post files...
Well, once again I get caught with the old end-of-sentence- punctuation-not-part-of-URL problem. Let's try again. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/electrica ...
Hi Phil, No, I was quite serious: addictive is exactly what it is, with the added twist that (as with a video game) the only reward you get for your efforts...
John, What's this Electrica Challenge? I visited the web page and found a total of 7 puzzles. Is that right? I've seen others posting problems with other...
Pete: In order to progress to harder puzzles/ciphers/etc., which are worth more points, you have to work your way up the ladder. Accordingly, you're only given...
Hi, This question is probably off topic, but I was wondering if anyone knew of a computer cipher system that would operate from a 1.44m floppy and that you...
Hi, This question is probably off topic, but I was wondering if anyone knew of a computer cipher system that would operate from a 1.44m floppy and that you...
Well, I'm certainly no expert on the subject, but I assume you mean something that will execute on a Windows pc or a Mac??? Something in Basic could run on ...
... I believe he said "any machine" which would include a lot more than just PCs and Macs (PPCs, MIPS, Alphas, etc.) The short answer is: no. Since different...
I think you both answered my question. Thank you. I was looking for a system so small as to fit on a floppy, unlike PGP or any of the other systems, which...