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Post by susb8383 on Oct 12, 2019 17:41:59 GMT -5
That's funny, I didn't even make a connection between hart and heart.
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Post by captnkush on Oct 24, 2019 17:01:33 GMT -5
Another thought on this would be 517 .i think a place that fits you like a glove is Michigan (the mitten state)but the next two lines always screamed artemis to me.so when i google Artemis Michigan i get alot of hits on the Artemis super collider at the university of Michigan wich i believe is the school that lukas attends. Seems at least plausible. Area code there is (517) as far as i can tell.
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Post by keladry12 on Nov 3, 2019 1:06:17 GMT -5
Another thought on this would be 517 .i think a place that fits you like a glove is Michigan (the mitten state)but the next two lines always screamed artemis to me.so when i google Artemis Michigan i get alot of hits on the Artemis super collider at the university of Michigan wich i believe is the school that lukas attends. Seems at least plausible. Area code there is (517) as far as i can tell. This is a very interesting thing to learn! Love the collider find.
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Post by captnkush on Nov 3, 2019 1:18:38 GMT -5
I thought it was cool..but after reviewing Lukas goes to Western. That said it could still be a possibility.
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Post by efanton on Nov 4, 2019 10:37:07 GMT -5
I have a solution to stanza 4 that produces 4 digits. IF stanza 5 results in 4 digits as well then that would only leave 2 digits for Stanza 3 meaning 313 (Dearborn area code) could not be correct. I would be tempted to suggest in the next question to Lukas that we somehow identify how many digits each stanza contributes to the 10 digits of the first key
Anyway, I was thinking about this problem, and as I was an advert for the TV program Hawaii 50 came on. It then occurred to me that 26 might be a possible solution to stanza 3, as Michigan was the 26th state to join the USA
Just throwing it out there. Not totally convinced to be honest, but it would allow a solve if stanza's 4 & 5 resulted in 4 digits each.
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Post by keladry12 on Nov 4, 2019 12:29:47 GMT -5
If we're interested in two digit solutions, we could consider Cape Town South Africa, country code 27, area code 21? I just feel like i have nothing to contribute and i haven't for a month....
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Post by vilani on Nov 7, 2019 13:58:04 GMT -5
I found another location that is a better fit, I think. I kept going back to what fits like a glove, and the best match really is skin to me. I know it was mentioned before. Things like womb and cradle really aren't a good match. I think we let the last line about mother influence our guess for the first line, but a womb isn't a tight fit at all around a baby. I'm pretty sure mother together with fawning is indicating deer. So I googled deerskin trying to find any location. I thought there would be lots, but surprisingly I just found one: Deerskin Lake in Wisconsin. (There is also a Deerskin Lake in Ontario and one in Indiana, but for that one the name shows in Google but there doesn't seem to be any body of water, so I'm not sure what's up with that. Other sites indicated it's a reservoir, so I don't see how you could call it). Since Lukas is from the US, I'm going with the one in WI. It is a small enough place that it looks like it only has one area code and one exchange: 715 479 Did you get something from these numbers? Just reading and thinking, Wisconsin has two sports team that rings a bell with this stanza: a baseball one, one of the sports that Lukas mentioned on his interview here, the Brewers, are throwing back to their 1978-1993 logo, which is basically a ball and a glove, and the Milwaukee Bucks, who is named after Winconsin's official wild animal, the white-tailed deer. Just a few more things adding to the state in Michigan's border.
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Post by susb8383 on Nov 8, 2019 21:15:58 GMT -5
No...the problem is that he implied that Key 1 is a 10 digit number, which is a phone number we can call to get confirmation. If that's the case, my guess is that part 1 is 3 digits part 2 is 3 digits part 4 is 4 digits.
Having part 1 be 6 digits just doesn't seem likely.
I'm going back to my original thought which is that part 1 is not an actual area code, they are the keypad numbers of a word.
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Post by efanton on Nov 15, 2019 19:05:47 GMT -5
Can anyone from the US explain what a Lansing area code is? There seems to be an Lansing code of 517 for Michigan in its entirety, rather than each city/town having its own individual code? Maybe I'm reading it wrong? dialcode.org/North_America/United_States/Michigan/If I am reading it right, what is Lansing? Is it a telecom operator? Is there something special about a Lansing code, that's different from other dial codes? I'm beginning to have serious doubts about the 313 solution. I'm happy with the 'Michigan' solution for fits you like a glove (mitten state), but I am beginning to wonder if we have over complicated things by narrowing it down to Dearborn, or that there might be another interpretation we have yet to think of for the last two lines of stanza 3. Maybe those last two line are simply packing to fill the verse, but that seems very unlike Lukas.
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Post by elysethecat on Nov 16, 2019 7:53:17 GMT -5
Lansing is a city in Michigan.
I am also not convinced on 313-Dearborn, and have been working additionally with 5 or 6 different options (some more far-fetched than others) since the summer.
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Post by susb8383 on Nov 16, 2019 10:53:33 GMT -5
Can anyone from the US explain what a Lansing area code is? There seems to be an Lansing code of 517 for Michigan in its entirety, rather than each city/town having its own individual code? In looking at that page you linked to, I agree it's confusing the way it looks to someone outside the U.S. It could be phrased better.
A state is divided into different area codes (some states only have one). Usually this is done with multiple cities within an area code, although I suppose it's possible to divide a city into different codes.
In Michigan, these cities have an area code of 517: Lansing Clinton Reading, etc.
The page you linked to is showing this from the point of view of one of these cities, Lansing. If you lived in Lansing, your area code is 517, and to dial it from outside the U.S., you would dial 1-517.
If you lived in Clinton, the same would be true.
And then beneath the heading of this page, they show a list of all cities and their area codes.
It really doesn't make sense to put Lansing at the top of that page. I don't see anything referring to Lansing in the URL, so it's not like they have a separate page for each Michigan city.
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Post by efanton on Nov 16, 2019 18:16:02 GMT -5
Can anyone from the US explain what a Lansing area code is? There seems to be an Lansing code of 517 for Michigan in its entirety, rather than each city/town having its own individual code? In looking at that page you linked to, I agree it's confusing the way it looks to someone outside the U.S. It could be phrased better.
A state is divided into different area codes (some states only have one). Usually this is done with multiple cities within an area code, although I suppose it's possible to divide a city into different codes.
In Michigan, these cities have an area code of 517: Lansing Clinton Reading, etc.
The page you linked to is showing this from the point of view of one of these cities, Lansing. If you lived in Lansing, your area code is 517, and to dial it from outside the U.S., you would dial 1-517.
If you lived in Clinton, the same would be true.
And then beneath the heading of this page, they show a list of all cities and their area codes.
It really doesn't make sense to put Lansing at the top of that page. I don't see anything referring to Lansing in the URL, so it's not like they have a separate page for each Michigan city.
Thanks Susb for the clarification. So Lansing is a town/city. Was beginning to think Lansing was a telecom company, or some form of alternative coding, and that this might be an alternative to the standard area codes and therefore another option for our solve.
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Post by treasurer on Nov 16, 2019 20:54:40 GMT -5
I've been using this as a resource for Michigan phone info:
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Post by efanton on Nov 17, 2019 6:58:56 GMT -5
I've been using this as a resource for Michigan phone info:
Thank you so much for posting that. I was looking for a geographical map of area codes and exchanges months ago.
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Post by susb8383 on Dec 1, 2019 12:14:48 GMT -5
I like the different perspective!
The def I found online for hind says it's a young female deer, not the mother of a deer. " A female deer, especially a red deer at least two years old." But that would still fit in with mother's love and fawning.
What about 4463 which would be hind on a telephone keypad? Hence the 'call.'
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