CACHERX Posted September 30, 2011 Posted September 30, 2011 444 6 33 2 66 66 666 8 8 666 222 666 66 333 88 7777 33 999 666 88 444 5 88 7777 8 8 44 666 88 4 44 8 9 44 444 555 33 444 9 2 7777 3 666 444 66 4 7777 666 6 88 222 44 222 666 3 33 22 777 33 2 55 444 66 4 6 999 7777 33 555 333 444 9 666 88 555 3 3 777 666 7 666 66 33 666 333 6 999 666 9 66 444 6 4 666 666 3 9 444 8 44 66 88 6 22 33 777 7777 7777 666 444 5 88 7777 8 7777 8 88 222 55 9 444 8 44 9 44 2 8 444 55 66 666 9 44 666 7 33 999 666 88 33 66 5 666 999 33 3 444 8 66 666 777 8 44 333 666 777 8 999 3 33 4 777 33 33 7777 7777 33 888 33 66 2 66 3 333 444 888 33 44 88 66 3 777 33 3 333 444 333 8 999 333 666 88 777 9 33 7777 8 33 444 4 44 8 999 33 444 4 44 8 333 444 333 8 999 333 444 888 33 8 44 33 66 66 444 66 33 44 88 66 3 777 33 3 8 44 444 777 8 999 7777 33 888 33 66 666 55 Can anyone help with this one? I'm thinking somewhere in here are coordinates for a geocache? Just can figure it out. Any help is appreciated. X
swansont Posted September 30, 2011 Posted September 30, 2011 What are the approximate coordinates of the cache? That usually helps. The coordinates given on the cache page are usually close to the actual cache, so the degrees of lat and long are typically the same.
imatfaal Posted October 5, 2011 Posted October 5, 2011 Have you tried just using a monoalphabetic substitution cipher? There seem to be about 23-25 different combinations - ie treat 444 as a single encoded letter. It is a nice variant on monoalphabetic if that is the case - the repeated digits immediately make you think that 3,33, and 333 must be connected in some way; but they could just be keying I, M, and A as an example. there are really good monoalphabetic substitution crackers available on the internet for download - I would give it a try, but I have just shifted to linux and I am having trouble with even the basics right now. Good indications of a monoalphabetic cipher are the number of different encoded bits (I think about right from a rough count), a characteristic distribution (any decent length normal english text will have around 12pct Es and definitely not all equal - again looks ok), an acceptable number of double letters, and very few triples (zoo opening before any one say no english word has a triple - spaces are very rarely encrypted) please let us know if you get any further
BC Photographer Posted October 9, 2011 Posted October 9, 2011 Have you tried just using a monoalphabetic substitution cipher? There seem to be about 23-25 different combinations - ie treat 444 as a single encoded letter. It is a nice variant on monoalphabetic if that is the case - the repeated digits immediately make you think that 3,33, and 333 must be connected in some way; but they could just be keying I, M, and A as an example. there are really good monoalphabetic substitution crackers available on the internet for download - I would give it a try, but I have just shifted to linux and I am having trouble with even the basics right now. Good indications of a monoalphabetic cipher are the number of different encoded bits (I think about right from a rough count), a characteristic distribution (any decent length normal english text will have around 12pct Es and definitely not all equal - again looks ok), an acceptable number of double letters, and very few triples (zoo opening before any one say no english word has a triple - spaces are very rarely encrypted) please let us know if you get any further I'm looking for the same cache, your comment was all I needed to solve it. Thanks. For the original poster ... think about phone texting in the days before they had nice little qwerty keyboards. From that it should take you only about 5 (tedious) minutes to decode the message. good luck finding the cache!
imatfaal Posted October 10, 2011 Posted October 10, 2011 Way to go BC photographer!! And I am glad I could help. did you get to the cache or just decipher the message?
Maro Posted September 13, 2021 Posted September 13, 2021 I think this is the message (10 years late lol), is it correct? I MEAN NOT TO CONFUSE YOU I JUST THOUGHT WHILE I WAS DOING SO MUCH CODE BREAKING MYSELF I WOULD DROP ONE OF MY OWN IM GOOD WITH NUMBERS SO I JUST STUCK WITH WHAT I KNOW HOPE YOU ENJOYED IT NORTH FORTY DEGREES SEVEN AND FIVE HUNDRED FIFTY FOUR WEST EIGHTY EIGHT FIFTY FIVE THEN NINE HUNDRED THIRTY SEVEN OK
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now