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Post by keladry12 on Sept 30, 2019 14:40:43 GMT -5
I think asking if the first key is comprised of ten numbers with no letters would help eliminate or potentially validate a phone number also, but also cover the chance it’s a ten digit string of numbers that isn’t a phone number. I definitely agree we shouldn't limit it to a phone number but I'm worried that "ten numbers" can be any number of digits; 334476 453 2 4 768889 is an example of five numbers, but 17 digits. As digit is a well-defined term that will limit it to the characters 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. And then we know the length, too. The other thing I worry about is how tricksy Lukas is. I wouldn't put it past him to, if it were a phone number, say "no, it is not ten numbers, it is a single number" (what I mean is that when I give out my phone number - no s there - I give all digits of it as my singular number....) I don't know, I feel like I need to try to be as literal as possible to avoid ambiguous answers.
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Post by efanton on Sept 30, 2019 14:53:40 GMT -5
I think asking if the first key is comprised of ten numbers with no letters would help eliminate or potentially validate a phone number also, but also cover the chance it’s a ten digit string of numbers that isn’t a phone number. I definitely agree we shouldn't limit it to a phone number but I'm worried that "ten numbers" can be any number of digits; 334476 453 2 4 768889 is an example of five numbers, but 17 digits. As digit is a well-defined term that will limit it to the characters 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. And then we know the length, too. The other thing I worry about is how tricksy Lukas is. I wouldn't put it past him to, if it were a phone number, say "no, it is not ten numbers, it is a single number" (what I mean is that when I give out my phone number - no s there - I give all digits of it as my singular number....) I don't know, I feel like I need to try to be as literal as possible to avoid ambiguous answers. which is exactly why the word comprised was used
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Post by goldenchild on Sept 30, 2019 16:47:19 GMT -5
I think asking if the first key is comprised of ten numbers with no letters would help eliminate or potentially validate a phone number also, but also cover the chance it’s a ten digit string of numbers that isn’t a phone number. I definitely agree we shouldn't limit it to a phone number but I'm worried that "ten numbers" can be any number of digits; 334476 453 2 4 768889 is an example of five numbers, but 17 digits. As digit is a well-defined term that will limit it to the characters 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. And then we know the length, too. The other thing I worry about is how tricksy Lukas is. I wouldn't put it past him to, if it were a phone number, say "no, it is not ten numbers, it is a single number" (what I mean is that when I give out my phone number - no s there - I give all digits of it as my singular number....) I don't know, I feel like I need to try to be as literal as possible to avoid ambiguous answers. you could be right. Maybe we should just ask if the first key consist of only numbers and no letters without mentioning ten at all. Then at least we’d know we aren’t looking for any letters. Which would mean X’s are out, the c4, f5 etc might either be wrong or the numbers are the important part or the letter/number combo might need further decoding (example: c4 could be shift from 4 up or down by 3(c). If he says no, then we know phone numbers are out, we would know we ARE looking to generate letters (maybe with or without numbers). You could be right, mentioning ten digits or ten numbers could leave room for trickster answers.
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Post by efanton on Sept 30, 2019 17:18:38 GMT -5
I definitely agree we shouldn't limit it to a phone number but I'm worried that "ten numbers" can be any number of digits; 334476 453 2 4 768889 is an example of five numbers, but 17 digits. As digit is a well-defined term that will limit it to the characters 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9. And then we know the length, too. The other thing I worry about is how tricksy Lukas is. I wouldn't put it past him to, if it were a phone number, say "no, it is not ten numbers, it is a single number" (what I mean is that when I give out my phone number - no s there - I give all digits of it as my singular number....) I don't know, I feel like I need to try to be as literal as possible to avoid ambiguous answers. you could be right. Maybe we should just ask if the first key consist of only numbers and no letters without mentioning ten at all. Then at least we’d know we aren’t looking for any letters. Which would mean X’s are out, the c4, f5 etc might either be wrong or the numbers are the important part or the letter/number combo might need further decoding (example: c4 could be shift from 4 up or down by 3(c). If he says no, then we know phone numbers are out, we would know we ARE looking to generate letters (maybe with or without numbers). You could be right, mentioning ten digits or ten numbers could leave room for trickster answers. I can see that being a logical question to ask. doesnt get us to where we would like to be, but I cant see a way of framing a question that gives a simple YES/NO answer that does. It seems we need TWO questions to get what we need. One question to define whether the individual characters of the first key are numbers or not, and another to determine the key length.
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Post by TheCoyWonder on Oct 2, 2019 11:27:16 GMT -5
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Post by goldenchild on Oct 2, 2019 11:42:53 GMT -5
Whoa we got two huge clues today! We know we’re looking for only numbers on the first key is huge. Great job on the question! And now having a search bar to test our keys is really huge! Now at least we can eliminate ides and be able to move on if they are wrong. It will greatly help us move forward on this eliminating all of the possibilities that have been shared. I can say I thought for sure open sesame would be the second key but now I know That Ali baba and open sesame are not it. I think we’re going to see some serious movement on this now.
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Post by efanton on Oct 2, 2019 12:32:42 GMT -5
Tested my solution for the first key and I get the following message
THIS CONTENT IS PASSWORD PROTECTED. TO VIEW IT PLEASE ENTER YOUR PASSWORD BELOW
Is everyone else getting that when they test their solution for the first key?
I then enter my password for my Patreon account, and get the same message.
Have I actually entered the correct solution for the first key? What password are we supposed to enter?
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Post by blahpsh on Oct 2, 2019 12:40:17 GMT -5
Tested my solution for the first key and I get the following message THIS CONTENT IS PASSWORD PROTECTED. TO VIEW IT PLEASE ENTER YOUR PASSWORD BELOWIs everyone else getting that when they test their solution for the first key? I then enter my password for my Patreon account, and get the same message. Have I actually entered the correct solution for the first key? What password are we supposed to enter? Yeah, that’s the message when you don’t have the correct solve for the key. Here’s his instructions posted on the test page: “Each link below will direct you to a password protected page. The password for each page is the the key. If you enter the key correctly, you will enter a page that says: “You have correctly entered the key.” “
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Post by keladry12 on Oct 2, 2019 12:42:57 GMT -5
In the video, Lukas said that if your key was correct you would be sent to a page that said "you have correcty entered the key". Unless he was lying about that, your key is wrong.
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Post by susb8383 on Oct 2, 2019 16:11:39 GMT -5
Lukas, THANK YOU for the key tester!!!!!! That is soooo incredibly helpful and will keep us from dialing some poor family in the U.S.
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Post by efanton on Oct 2, 2019 16:43:08 GMT -5
Lukas, THANK YOU for the key tester!!!!!! That is soooo incredibly helpful and will keep us from dialing some poor family in the U.S. his key tester has a bug in it, it rejects my solution for the first key But honestly, you are right, it will be extremely useful and help us avoid potentially embarrassing moments.
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Post by treasurer on Oct 7, 2019 15:39:32 GMT -5
Lukas, THANK YOU for the key tester!!!!!! That is soooo incredibly helpful and will keep us from dialing some poor family in the U.S. his key tester has a bug in it, it rejects my solution for the first key But honestly, you are right, it will be extremely useful and help us avoid potentially embarrassing moments. I agree with efanton, Lukas your KEY TESTER is broken cause it's not acknowledging correct answers!  ...
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exo
New Member
Posts: 7
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Post by exo on Oct 9, 2019 17:26:14 GMT -5
If our assumptions for far are right, I believe the video itself has many clues. (Some pointed out already) -top shelf books 10 up (10 digits) -next shelf pendragon book series (10 books about a boy and space travel, could link to the E.T. Hypothesis) -next shelf is games (bowling hypothesis) -next shelf the most prominent book is MUSIC If these are actually clues, I am hoping there is more in the video we can find to help
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Post by silverskies on Dec 15, 2019 12:27:51 GMT -5
Can anyone confirm if the password checkers are working? I have a few possibilities for the first one that I have tried and dont know if it is working?
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Post by captnkush on Dec 15, 2019 18:59:08 GMT -5
Can anyone confirm if the password checkers are working? I have a few possibilities for the first one that I have tried and dont know if it is working? as far as i can tell it seems to be working.
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