[DISCUSSION] Locations
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Sorry Lad, but this isn't really a puzzle... it wouldn't really fit the puzzle thread as we're just discussing/defining a new encoding methodology. It does make sense to split it into a new thread. We could call it "[bird flu] continued fractions encoding" if you like.ladron121 wrote:I could have sworn that there was a PUZZLE THREAD for this type of thing...
You know, it has a big title on it that says its for puzzles. So I can avoid it, like the bird flu...
Balmung, thanks for keeping up with me and following along, it's good to bounce these crazy ideas off of others. And I apologize to everyone else who's getting a headache from this. It's tilting's fault!
Sure you can, however no negative numbers are allowed except for the first number, so I'm not sure how you would differentiate between E or W latitudes.Balmung wrote:could you possibly encode a location using a continued fraction?
[degrees N, minutes, seconds, degrees W, minutes, seconds]
Yeah I don't see any more significance to 10033 other than the reference to 1033 in "Y: The Last Man." It started as a way to play with 10033 while jesting with tilt, but this encoding scheme has caught my attention.Balmung wrote:in the long run, i'm sure 10033 is either completely random, or it's significance is either so small or so obscure that no one will find out i's true meaning before it is revealed.
it's sure fun to look, though.
[not to mention i learned a new code ]
Yup, I just came up with all of this; it struck me as an interesting idea that might work, and it does. So yes, there needs to be an agreement about the character mapping (ascii allows for punctuation, numbers and upper/lower case). This mapping could be a standard or it could be changed on a per-message basis, sort of like a key.Balmung wrote:p.s. is it universally accepted that a = 27, or did you come up with the idea of using continued fractions as a code just now? if so, one would think a could be 2, b =3 , etc. with z being 27.
Another use of 10033 could be in a sort of key-like device to obscure the code by adding 10033 to the final encoded numbers. Using that last "santaa nellaa dropa" example:
Message: SANTAA
Unobscured: 12299/617
Add 10033: 22332/10650
[2,10,3,7,1,6]
Decoded: BJCGAF
Message: NELLAA
Unobscured: 21792/1535
Add 10033: 31825/11568
[2,1,3,55,2,1,2,1,4]
Decoded: BAC?BABAD
Message: DROPA
Unobscured: 18756/4625
Add 10033: 28789/14658
[1,1,26,1,4,2,1,1,1,5,2]
Decoded: AAZADBAAAEB
Ends up pretty nicely obscured as "bjcgaf bac?babad aazadaaaeb"
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Balmung wrote:could you possibly encode a location using a continued fraction?
[degrees N, minutes, seconds, degrees W, minutes, seconds]
Simply proving that I don't really understand, I suppose, but I think you would multiply by the imaginary number i, squared. The result would be negative if you did; positive if you didn't.deagol wrote:Sure you can, however no negative numbers are allowed except for the first number, so I'm not sure how you would differentiate between E or W latitudes.
Also, latitude 33.001 does run next to two places of interest. San Diego, California, and Roswell, New Mexico.
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- CrazyIvan1745
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just an update on me... the snow is messing things up a bit and I am not havin much luck on finding stuff on Google Earth.... I am also busy with other projects in the real world..... (plus lookin at a college next weekend) So I will not be able to do a whole lot until next Tues.... and even then who knows... but for now deagol keep at it lol who knows maybe you'll give me coordinates. (which I have tried a bit)
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I refuse to accept the blame for Deagol's inability to stand down from a challenge. You all have only yourselves to blame...although I fully sympathize with Lad fear that this virus will become transferable among humans and we will soon all be delirious in mathspeak.
"A step in the right direction? It only turns out to be so if you're willing to step much further."
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deagol wrote:Sorry Lad, but this isn't really a puzzle... it wouldn't really fit the puzzle thread as we're just discussing/defining a new encoding methodology. It does make sense to split it into a new thread. We could call it "[bird flu] continued fractions encoding" if you like.ladron121 wrote:I could have sworn that there was a PUZZLE THREAD for this type of thing...
You know, it has a big title on it that says its for puzzles. So I can avoid it, like the bird flu...
Balmung, thanks for keeping up with me and following along, it's good to bounce these crazy ideas off of others. And I apologize to everyone else who's getting a headache from this. It's tilting's fault!
Sure you can, however no negative numbers are allowed except for the first number, so I'm not sure how you would differentiate between E or W latitudes.Balmung wrote:could you possibly encode a location using a continued fraction?
[degrees N, minutes, seconds, degrees W, minutes, seconds]
Yeah I don't see any more significance to 10033 other than the reference to 1033 in "Y: The Last Man." It started as a way to play with 10033 while jesting with tilt, but this encoding scheme has caught my attention.Balmung wrote:in the long run, i'm sure 10033 is either completely random, or it's significance is either so small or so obscure that no one will find out i's true meaning before it is revealed.
it's sure fun to look, though.
[not to mention i learned a new code ]
Yup, I just came up with all of this; it struck me as an interesting idea that might work, and it does. So yes, there needs to be an agreement about the character mapping (ascii allows for punctuation, numbers and upper/lower case). This mapping could be a standard or it could be changed on a per-message basis, sort of like a key.Balmung wrote:p.s. is it universally accepted that a = 27, or did you come up with the idea of using continued fractions as a code just now? if so, one would think a could be 2, b =3 , etc. with z being 27.
Another use of 10033 could be in a sort of key-like device to obscure the code by adding 10033 to the final encoded numbers. Using that last "santaa nellaa dropa" example:
Message: SANTAA
Unobscured: 12299/617
Add 10033: 22332/10650
[2,10,3,7,1,6]
Decoded: BJCGAF
Message: NELLAA
Unobscured: 21792/1535
Add 10033: 31825/11568
[2,1,3,55,2,1,2,1,4]
Decoded: BAC?BABAD
Message: DROPA
Unobscured: 18756/4625
Add 10033: 28789/14658
[1,1,26,1,4,2,1,1,1,5,2]
Decoded: AAZADBAAAEB
Ends up pretty nicely obscured as "bjcgaf bac?babad aazadaaaeb"
holy crap haha yeah
of course the biggest thing here is that as cool as this code is, there's no way that 10033 is encoded using continued fractions, since you just made up it's usage as a code right now lol
but the apo's latitude thing is interestingg..
- CrazyIvan1745
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I tried using 10033 as a longitude and latitude and found so possible points in CA. no matter how you re arrange the numbers or add decimals ar using minutes/seconds. So either thats not what it is or it decodes to something then THAT # is a longitude latitude. Then, the possiblities even for CA alone would be too large to get any info... I think 10033 means something other than a coordinate. When most people choose a # for a screenname they use a 2-4 digit #, very rarely do you see a 5 digit number. So, I also do not believe it is random. But an address tends to have 5 digits... There can't be THAT many houses with 10033 as their address... Thats my opinion.
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