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My god, that was hard to read!!!
by the way, FIRST!!!!!!!

Posted by: Julie P. on June 29, 2008 10:19 AM


Made my eyes water for 10 minutes...!

Posted by: Ahana on June 29, 2008 10:35 AM


I haven't solved it yet, but I see a binary pattern in the lower box which I assume is a key.

Are there grey and black lines or am I just seeing stuff?

Posted by: Albert Wang '12 on June 29, 2008 11:08 AM


Oh its just my browser. Its scaling changes the line colors.

Posted by: Albert Wang '12 on June 29, 2008 11:11 AM


Ah, too easy, the answer is "Tetris"

Posted by: Prospect '13 Sarli on June 29, 2008 11:26 AM


Lol. You're a funny guy Sarli.

Posted by: Mike '12 on June 29, 2008 11:52 AM


Hah. You would only need 36 blocks to spell "tetris" without making huge amounts of wasted space.

On the other hand, all those other blocks might just encode for "caps lock" and "end caps lock"

Still no idea how this works though. I think that there's only 1 word since there's no key for "space" but I'm just guessing. (but then, there's punctuation stuff, so.....)

Posted by: Albert Wang '12 on June 29, 2008 12:23 PM


@ Albert
The one word thing sounds plausible. I haven't gotten anywhere with this yet, either.

Posted by: Mary on June 29, 2008 12:34 PM


Maybe the spaces between the boxes on top represent the spaces, and each box is a word. That way you wouldn't need a space option, and commas could be included as part of the word.

Posted by: Anonymous on June 29, 2008 12:52 PM


Something to do with Exponential growth?

pattern, 1,2,4,8,16,32
on key

Posted by: Sarli on June 29, 2008 01:16 PM


@Anonymous interesting thought. However, each of the boxes contain the same number of squares (36). Assuming that each letter has a set number of squares (and that the squares aren't reusable for multiple letters [or some other crypto trick]), that would mean each of the 18 words had the same number of letters. (which would be totally awesome if it were true)

Its 1:13 AM here and I'm still working on this. God, what a dork I am.


Snively, stop nerd-sniping

@Sarli: if you know where nerd-sniping comes from, you're halfway to MIT. ;)

Posted by: Albert Wang '12 on June 29, 2008 01:18 PM


Posted by: Mary on June 29, 2008 01:35 PM


the first word is "to"

Posted by: clue '11 on June 29, 2008 01:49 PM


Nerd-sniping = trew => we have no lives

Snively touche' you have me going, now im afraid I will stop at nothing.
Snively = Trebek
Sarli = Sean Connery
Celebrity jeopardy.

Posted by: Sarli on June 29, 2008 01:49 PM


to be or not to be, that is the answer.

Posted by: Anonymous on June 29, 2008 01:53 PM


I've noticed a couple of things. The key has the pattern 1,2,4,8,16,32. When you consider this and add up all the whites A has a value of 0, B of 1, C of 2 etc all the way to 31. Yet near the end of that there's an error. After '?' which is 28 there comes 31, 30, and 29. Theres 18 grids, each has a height of 12, yet the height of the key is only 6, you might have to cut that into two halves. Maybe that will help some of you.

Posted by: Yarian G. on June 29, 2008 01:57 PM


Posted by: Anonymous on June 29, 2008 01:58 PM


Posted by: Anonymous on June 29, 2008 02:01 PM


I really want to spend time on this, however, I should probably finish working first.

Posted by: Jeremy '12 on June 29, 2008 02:02 PM


Okay, the first word being "to" makes sense if you look at the first line of the first block. Take the top six squares, shift the the first white square down one, and you have T. Take the bottom six squares and move the last white square up one, and you have O. I haven't been able to make this work for any other lines/blocks yet.

Posted by: Mary on June 29, 2008 02:15 PM


In the video link from the description the people crossing the street are often dressed in either black or white. Do you think this means anything?

Posted by: Mary on June 29, 2008 02:41 PM


There's too much white for it to be straight up encoded with some bizarre grouping. Note that the most common letters (e,t,a,i,o,n,s,h,r) are all at least 50% black. I haven't checked it rigorously yet, but I'm pretty sure there's much more white than would occur in a normal English passage.

Posted by: Arjun on June 29, 2008 03:10 PM


Yay for 16/56

Posted by: Anonymous on June 29, 2008 04:09 PM


That's some darned good advice...

Posted by: viccro '12 on June 29, 2008 04:21 PM


The phrase implies that there is some advice to follow....

Posted by: Arjun on June 29, 2008 04:24 PM


Hey Arjun, have you tried inversing the colors by any chance? Also, I think the amount of lines (vertical and horizontal) in each 3x12 column is suspicious, though, haven't found much of a breakthrough in either of these just yet.

Posted by: Jeremy '12 on June 29, 2008 05:16 PM


@ Jeremy
I've been messing around with inversing too. All the letters in the key have a black square at the top, but in the coded part, only 8 of the squares in the top row are black, and 20 of the squares in the seventh. This just occurred to me as I was typing: Is it possible that we're supposed to inverse everything, and then the white squares (which were originally black) denote spaces? This would mean a 13-letter word in the middle, and a 15-letter word towards the end, so maybe not.

Posted by: Mary on June 29, 2008 05:35 PM


Scratch that. If the black squares are spaces, there would be two one-letter words in the second block, which is grammatically ridiculous.

Posted by: Mary on June 29, 2008 05:41 PM


@Jeremy
I had solved it; I was referring to the fact the phrase it solves to implies that there's more to follow..

You'll see what I mean when you solve it.

Posted by: Arjun on June 29, 2008 05:45 PM


@Arjun
Go ahead and e-mail me the answer so I can double check, don't forget to include a method!

snively [at] mit [dot] edu

Posted by: Snively on June 29, 2008 05:49 PM


Oh gosh, I should not have looked at that after being sick with the flu all day....

Cool, though.

Posted by: Anonymous on June 29, 2008 06:03 PM


I feel like this is the kind of thing where the answer's really obvious but you still don't get it.

Posted by: Anon on June 29, 2008 08:41 PM


Do you think there is any significance (beyond irony on the puzzle-maker's part) of the binary aberration being on the question mark?

Posted by: Anonymous on June 29, 2008 09:06 PM


I think we're over-thinking this.

Sigh, my brain hurts.

Posted by: Anonymous on June 29, 2008 09:56 PM


I cant figure it out. lol.

Posted by: Sarli on June 29, 2008 09:59 PM


@ Anonymous
My brain hurts too. I'm leaning toward the binary key for a solution though.

Posted by: Mary on June 29, 2008 10:00 PM


Glad I came back to it when I got home. I'm pretty sure I got it!!!! HAZZAH!!!

@ Arjun: Yeah, I know what you mean. It seems like a real cliff hangar.

Posted by: Jeremy on June 30, 2008 01:06 AM


b,f,j,n,r,v,z in the key and such other groups make a striking pattern...it is almost fractal-ish.

Posted by: Anonymous on June 30, 2008 05:25 AM


Many of the things that have been said in these comments are right on.

@Arjun and Jeremy: The answer makes sense in itself if you know what it means.

Posted by: Thomas on June 30, 2008 06:48 AM


Is it like... I don't know, a definition or a description of something... I'm confused and I feel like I really shouldn't be, especially after that.

Posted by: Jeremy on June 30, 2008 10:26 AM


Yeah it's a definition. Don't wanna say of what for those who are still trying to crack it.

Posted by: Thomas on June 30, 2008 10:44 AM


edit the image in ms paint

Posted by: Anonymous on June 30, 2008 02:11 PM


@Snively: I know this is really awkward and random, but I saw you at Porter Station on Saturday on my way inbound to a BBQ at MIT. It was so weird/coincidental, and I felt like such a stalker.

Posted by: Li'12 on June 30, 2008 02:52 PM


Strangest thing, when I download the picture on my mac, the preview pic of it is a tube and a letter. but whenever I open it in anything to view it its the crypto. hm....

other than that HOW CRUEL OF YOU SNIVELY I STILL CANT SOLVE IT!

Posted by: Kevin on June 30, 2008 03:55 PM


must not ask for hints... must not ask for hints...
oh my, this is hard.
:/

Posted by: Anonymous on June 30, 2008 04:20 PM


@Li '12
lol, I must have been on my way to see Maddie. That's ok though, at least you didn't scream at me from across the platform or anything, that would have been a bit creepy.

Posted by: Snively on June 30, 2008 04:26 PM


I feel dumb. =P

Posted by: Becky '12 on June 30, 2008 06:30 PM


The key isn't anything special, flip the bits and you'll get 0, 1, 2, 3 ... 27, 28, 31, 30, 29.

Posted by: Anonymous on July 2, 2008 06:32 AM


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