] Thursday : Lingering showers throughout the day. Chance ] of rain 800 percent. ] ] Friday : Moist. Damp. Sodden. ] ] Saturday : Rainish. Showery. Precipitacious. ] ] Sunday : Light rain followed by heavy rain followed by ] pouring. Okay, why is this in the cryptography topic? It's because I think I have a good lead on solving the Kryptos sculpture at CIA HQ, but I'm being prevented from following it because of bad weather on the East coast. For a quick summary: most of the encrypted text on the CIA's Kryptos sculpture has been solved, except for 97 or 98 characters down at the bottom, which have withstood extensive cryptanalysis for over 10 years. The tack that I've been taking on cracking it, is to research the heck out of the sculptor, Jim Sanborn. I've learned that he's got some other sculptures out there that also have codes on them, such as the Cyrillic Projector at the University of North Carolina (which has also withstood cracking for many years). More recently, I've discovered that Sanborn has another crypto-sculpture called "Antipodes", which is at the Hirshhorn Museum in DC. From the few pictures I've seen of it, it seems to have every single character that's on the Cyrillic Projector, *and* every character that's on the CIA's Kryptos sculpture, *and* an additional 20% of encrypted text down at the bottom which is on none of Sanborn's other sculptures (that I know of). So my current theory, is that perhaps the reason that the bottom of Kryptos hasn't been cracked, is because it's an incomplete fragment -- only the top part of a larger code, and that the intent was that some footwork and intelligence-gathering was required to obtain the full text. This would also tie in to the "whirlpool" fountain at the base of Kryptos, which may have "sucked away" the rest of the code. I've spent the last month trying to work with museum curators, Sanborn's agent and primary galleries, and others, trying to get pictures or a transcript of Antipodes. They have all refused though, citing either lack of time, or concerns about intellectual property issues. About a week ago, I found someone in the DC area who *is* willing to go take pictures of the thing, but every single day they've attempted to visit the sculpture since then, it's been RAINING, and since the sculpture is in a semi-outdoor area, this prevented the picture-taking. So, as soon as the weather actually clears, the pictures will (hopefully) be taken, I'll make a transcript, and we may get this thing cracked. But so far, the weather reports don't look good. Gah, the suspense is killing me . . . More information on the above: Kryptos: http://www.elonka.com/kryptos Sanborn: http://www.elonka.com/kryptos/sanborn.html Cyrillic Projector: http://www.elonka.com/kryptos/cyrillic.html (tiny) pic of Antipodes: http://hirshhorn.si.edu/images/collection/img_low/98.22.jpg |