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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Kryptos on NOVAscienceNOW - July 24, 2007. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Kryptos on NOVAscienceNOW - July 24, 2007
by Elonka at 7:00 pm EDT, Jul 16, 2007

Get out your pencils: the most mysterious of all codes in the most clandestine of all places has yet to be fully broken. "Kryptos," a coded sculpture in the courtyard of CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, contains a long string of seemingly nonsensical letters that conceal a message devised by sculptor James Sanborn. Correspondent and supersleuth Chad Cohen gets cracking, covering the cipher techniques used by Sanborn and the success of amateur code breaker Jim Gillogly at reading portions of the text. The deciphered sections include a poem, a reference to something buried on CIA grounds, and an extract from an eyewitness report of the discovery of King Tut's tomb. But the beguiling last bit of the message remains a mystery. Solutions anyone?

Okay, we're within "TiVo" time-range, so I figured it was about time I blogged it. Next week, Tuesday night on NOVA, there will be a 15-minute segment on Kryptos. The documentary filmmakers did their homework on this one: There are interviews with Kryptos artist Sanborn, code expert Ed Scheidt (who designed the systems that are used on Kryptos), Jim Gillogly (first person to publicly crack parts 1-3), and yours truly, Kryptos fangirl incarnate. ;) They flew me out to DC, to film an interview at the Hirshhorn museum next to Sanborn's "Antipodes" sculpture (which has all the text of Kryptos, plus encrypted Russian text which we cracked in 2003). I'm looking forward to seeing the segment!

FYI,

Elonka :)


 
RE: Kryptos on NOVAscienceNOW - July 24, 2007
by schwarb at 12:13 am EDT, Jul 25, 2007

Elonka wrote:

Get out your pencils: the most mysterious of all codes in the most clandestine of all places has yet to be fully broken. "Kryptos," a coded sculpture in the courtyard of CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, contains a long string of seemingly nonsensical letters that conceal a message devised by sculptor James Sanborn. Correspondent and supersleuth Chad Cohen gets cracking, covering the cipher techniques used by Sanborn and the success of amateur code breaker Jim Gillogly at reading portions of the text. The deciphered sections include a poem, a reference to something buried on CIA grounds, and an extract from an eyewitness report of the discovery of King Tut's tomb. But the beguiling last bit of the message remains a mystery. Solutions anyone?

Okay, we're within "TiVo" time-range, so I figured it was about time I blogged it. Next week, Tuesday night on NOVA, there will be a 15-minute segment on Kryptos. The documentary filmmakers did their homework on this one: There are interviews with Kryptos artist Sanborn, code expert Ed Scheidt (who designed the systems that are used on Kryptos), Jim Gillogly (first person to publicly crack parts 1-3), and yours truly, Kryptos fangirl incarnate. ;) They flew me out to DC, to film an interview at the Hirshhorn museum next to Sanborn's "Antipodes" sculpture (which has all the text of Kryptos, plus encrypted Russian text which we cracked in 2003). I'm looking forward to seeing the segment!

FYI,

Elonka :)

I'm watching it now, Elonka! As you can imagine I was pleasantly surprised when I first saw you on the preview. I'll update this post after I watch then entire episode.

Post viewing edit: I thought they did a great job of introducing crypto, and Kryptos, to the layman. A couple of my friends who also watched the segment agreed, and noted that they have a renewed interest in crypto. Congratulations, Elonka.

Also, try to crack this code they presented at the end of the segment:

WNLWfeyyjpbPHG


 
RE: Kryptos on NOVAscienceNOW - July 24, 2007
by aaron at 11:51 pm EDT, Jul 28, 2007

Hello Elonka I really enjoyed this segment.

This seemed a bit obvious.

WNLWfeyyjpbPHG is "NOVAscienceNOW"

-Aaron

Elonka wrote:

Get out your pencils: the most mysterious of all codes in the most clandestine of all places has yet to be fully broken. "Kryptos," a coded sculpture in the courtyard of CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, contains a long string of seemingly nonsensical letters that conceal a message devised by sculptor James Sanborn. Correspondent and supersleuth Chad Cohen gets cracking, covering the cipher techniques used by Sanborn and the success of amateur code breaker Jim Gillogly at reading portions of the text. The deciphered sections include a poem, a reference to something buried on CIA grounds, and an extract from an eyewitness report of the discovery of King Tut's tomb. But the beguiling last bit of the message remains a mystery. Solutions anyone?

Okay, we're within "TiVo" time-range, so I figured it was about time I blogged it. Next week, Tuesday night on NOVA, there will be a 15-minute segment on Kryptos. The documentary filmmakers did their homework on this one: There are interviews with Kryptos artist Sanborn, code expert Ed Scheidt (who designed the systems that are used on Kryptos), Jim Gillogly (first person to publicly crack parts 1-3), and yours truly, Kryptos fangirl incarnate. ;) They flew me out to DC, to film an interview at the Hirshhorn museum next to Sanborn's "Antipodes" sculpture (which has all the text of Kryptos, plus encrypted Russian text which we cracked in 2003). I'm looking forward to seeing the segment!

FYI,

Elonka :)


  
RE: Kryptos on NOVAscienceNOW - July 24, 2007
by chovy at 3:12 am EDT, Aug 6, 2007

aaron wrote:
Hello Elonka I really enjoyed this segment.

This seemed a bit obvious.

WNLWfeyyjpbPHG is "NOVAscienceNOW"

-Aaron

While the answer is obvious...what is the solution?

curiously,
Anthony


  
RE: Kryptos on NOVAscienceNOW - July 24, 2007
by Elonka at 8:36 pm EDT, Aug 16, 2007

aaron wrote:
Hello Elonka I really enjoyed this segment.

This seemed a bit obvious.

WNLWfeyyjpbPHG is "NOVAscienceNOW"

-Aaron

Nope. :)


 
 
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