Top 5 alphanumerical code
witch wyzwurd
10 Dec 2006, 20:32GB wrote:
A=1;B=2;C=3;etc...
1421:
14:N
2: B
1:A
NBA: BAN: NAB
1302:
1:A
30:D
2:B
ADB: DAB: BAD
831:
8:H
31:E
HE
616:
61:I
6:F
IF
563:
DC (District of Columbia)
NAB BAD HE, IF DC.
(hmmmm.......... I'll be watching.)
I kept this out of GameBoy's post, which I'm sure he'll appreciate (for whatever reason)
OK, you can chastise me now, but first...
read some of my poems at http://www.globallablog.com/prod.html
and see my new Word Stack section "Science" in the Word Stacks page.
1 - Tr0n - 1421
2 - GameBoy - 1302
3 - davidw - 831
4 - Alex - 616
5 - 007bond - 563
A=1;B=2;C=3;etc...
1421:
14:N
2: B
1:A
NBA: BAN: NAB
1302:
1:A
30:D
2:B
ADB: DAB: BAD
831:
8:H
31:E
HE
616:
61:I
6:F
IF
563:
DC (District of Columbia)
NAB BAD HE, IF DC.
(hmmmm.......... I'll be watching.)
I kept this out of GameBoy's post, which I'm sure he'll appreciate (for whatever reason)
OK, you can chastise me now, but first...
read some of my poems at http://www.globallablog.com/prod.html
and see my new Word Stack section "Science" in the Word Stacks page.
davidw
10 Dec 2006, 21:08Even the spam-posting trolls make more sense than you.
witch wyzwurd
12 Dec 2006, 13:20GB wrote:
Update: When I was figuring out a decryption for the numerical chains above, I tested if the number 007 should be used. I decided since it wasn't a post-count number that it should not. When I was testing it I came up with:
007:G
5:E
63:K
GEK: KEG
KEG was too obscure compared to the other terms, which helped to direct me away from using the name-number.
While walking up a staircase yesterday, I looked over my shoulder (for whatever reason) and caught two words on the back of a boy's jacket: KEG DEPT. (or KEG DEPARTMENT). I see the word KEG maybe once every 5 years or more. Not a common word for me. The very next word I saw was on a man's shirt: D.A.R.E. (first the connection with drugs/alcohol, second D.A.R.E. anagrammatically becomes R.E.A.D., an instruction to focus my attention to words on clothing).
BOND/DEPARTMENT
DC DEPARTMENT
U.S. STOCKS AND BONDS/FINANCIAL DEPARTMENT: clue
1 - Tr0n - 1421
2 - GameBoy - 1302
3 - davidw - 831
4 - Alex - 616
5 - 007bond - 563
Update: When I was figuring out a decryption for the numerical chains above, I tested if the number 007 should be used. I decided since it wasn't a post-count number that it should not. When I was testing it I came up with:
007:G
5:E
63:K
GEK: KEG
KEG was too obscure compared to the other terms, which helped to direct me away from using the name-number.
While walking up a staircase yesterday, I looked over my shoulder (for whatever reason) and caught two words on the back of a boy's jacket: KEG DEPT. (or KEG DEPARTMENT). I see the word KEG maybe once every 5 years or more. Not a common word for me. The very next word I saw was on a man's shirt: D.A.R.E. (first the connection with drugs/alcohol, second D.A.R.E. anagrammatically becomes R.E.A.D., an instruction to focus my attention to words on clothing).
BOND/DEPARTMENT
DC DEPARTMENT
U.S. STOCKS AND BONDS/FINANCIAL DEPARTMENT: clue
Elexxorine
13 Dec 2006, 14:10You're weird and I mean that in the best possible way.
witch wyzwurd
13 Dec 2006, 16:171. http://www.cnn.com/2006/LAW/12/12/blind ... index.html
connection: blind and money; R.E.A.D. Treasury notes.
2. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 01393.html
connection: DC and name-bond; Reagan-era budget chief David Stockman
Connections are indicators for main event to happen.
connection: blind and money; R.E.A.D. Treasury notes.
2. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 01393.html
connection: DC and name-bond; Reagan-era budget chief David Stockman
Connections are indicators for main event to happen.