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| Tags: around, monkey |
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#1
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"Clifford J. Nelson" wrote in message ... Like a bowman drawing the bowstring back, I repeat myself and: I think I'm a very determined deterministic Eddington monkey sometimes. Take a 26 by 26 keyboard; the height of each key is proportional to the letter pair frequency in the first ten thousand characters of Hamlet. I hit the highest key which stays down and it prints the letter t. Next I hit the highest key in the h row because the first key was the letter pair th, and it prints an h. Then I print an e, etc.. It will take another kind of monkey to interpret what I type. The first forty eight characters a therestindiseantongenoritedatarttsaletrasouroftut I got a hit on a search for the the word "trasour" once and it could have been something you would expect to find in king tut's tomb and sold at an art sale. I got a hit at the word "there" Are mon-keys trying to tell us something? The 28 by 28 letter pair correlation matrix based on the dialog from Act III of Hamlet with an alphabet that includes the space and the apostrophe: it is obvious the first letter must be a q because that row has a sum of one less than the sum of the corresponding column. The first 26 characters output a qur the an merend what s in They spell the Moslem religious book "the Qur'an", sometimes. Frequency tables from the book: Scientific and engineering problem-solving with the computer, William Ralph Bennett, Jr., 1976. Interesting. We have a very successful monkey on sci.physics.relativity that you should check out at once. His name is Ken Seto. Go and have a look... Dirk Vdm |
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#2
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Nobody has understood me so far, so, here it is again with the algorithm
and everything. J Programming Language function g. g=: 4 : 0 t=. y. k=. {.x. an=. {.x. for. i.{: x. do. ma=. ./k{t ne=. (k{t)i. ma t =. 0 (k;ne)}t k=. ne an=.an,ne end. an ) People gave put hidden messages in literature for a long time, so they wont get there heads chopped off when they offend the wrong person. There was a physicist (a Nobel prize winner) on TV many years ago who said he spent all of his time after he retired studying the statistics of Shakespeare's writing. I thought that would be boring, but now I have a computer and the free J Programming Language from www.jsoftware.com, and it's interesting. I think I'm a very determined deterministic Eddington monkey sometimes. Take a 26 by 26 keyboard; the height of each key is proportional to the letter pair frequency in the first ten thousand characters of Hamlet. I hit the highest key which stays down and it prints the letter t. Next I hit the highest key in the h row because the first key was the letter pair th, and it prints an h. Then I print an e, etc.. It will take another kind of monkey to interpret what I type. The first forty eight characters a (1) therestindiseantongenoritedatarttsaletrasouroftut I got a hit on an Internet search for the meaning of the word "trasour" and it is probably a tracery, something you would expect to find in king tut's tomb and sold at an art sale. Alphabets. aa =: 'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz' aaa=: aa,' ''' (1) output is from statement (19 48 g cc) { aa where cc is 26 by 26 table from first ten thousand characters of Hamlet. Are mon-keys trying to tell us something? The 28 by 28 letter pair correlation matrix based on the dialog from Act III of Hamlet with an alphabet that includes the space and the apostrophe: it is obvious the first letter must be a q because that row has a sum of one more than the sum of the corresponding column. The first 26 characters output a (2) qur the an merend what s in They spell the Moslem religious book "the Qur'an", sometimes. (2) output is from statement (16 26 g ss) { aaa where ss is 28 by 28 table from dialog in Act III of Hamlet. Frequency tables cc and ss are from the books: Mr. Babbage's Secret, The Tale of a Cypher -- and APL, by Ole Immanuel Franksen, 1985. Scientific and engineering problem-solving with the computer, by William Ralph Bennett, Jr., 1976. Cliff Nelson Dirk Van de moortel wrote: "Clifford J. Nelson" wrote in message ... Like a bowman drawing the bowstring back, I repeat myself and: I think I'm a very determined deterministic Eddington monkey sometimes. Take a 26 by 26 keyboard; the height of each key is proportional to the letter pair frequency in the first ten thousand characters of Hamlet. I hit the highest key which stays down and it prints the letter t. Next I hit the highest key in the h row because the first key was the letter pair th, and it prints an h. Then I print an e, etc.. It will take another kind of monkey to interpret what I type. The first forty eight characters a therestindiseantongenoritedatarttsaletrasouroftu t I got a hit on a search for the the word "trasour" once and it could have been something you would expect to find in king tut's tomb and sold at an art sale. I got a hit at the word "there" Are mon-keys trying to tell us something? The 28 by 28 letter pair correlation matrix based on the dialog from Act III of Hamlet with an alphabet that includes the space and the apostrophe: it is obvious the first letter must be a q because that row has a sum of one less than the sum of the corresponding column. The first 26 characters output a qur the an merend what s in They spell the Moslem religious book "the Qur'an", sometimes. Frequency tables from the book: Scientific and engineering problem-solving with the computer, William Ralph Bennett, Jr., 1976. Interesting. We have a very successful monkey on sci.physics.relativity that you should check out at once. His name is Ken Seto. Go and have a look... Dirk Vdm |
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#3
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"Clifford Nelson" wrote in message et... Nobody has understood me so far, so, here it is again with the algorithm and everything. J Programming Language function g. g=: 4 : 0 t=. y. k=. {.x. an=. {.x. for. i.{: x. do. ma=. ./k{t ne=. (k{t)i. ma t =. 0 (k;ne)}t k=. ne an=.an,ne end. an ) Now, be a sport, and try to reverse engineer Ken Seto's program. Interesting. We have a very successful monkey on sci.physics.relativity that you should check out at once. His name is Ken Seto. Go and have a look... And please do not top-post - Thanks Dirk Vdm |
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