This file is designed for research into 3d glyphs. It contains the two-hexagon calibration grid expressed as a truncated and rotated cube, with the center point as the origin. This geometry has the advantage of being unambiguous- from this position, each glyph node as expressed in our current 2d methods can be seen to have a clean 3d spatial analog. Included in the file are all glyphs currently known, both those with theorized meanings and those without. Use this file to experiment with views and configurations. It is a Rhinoceros file, and the demo version can be had for free at rhino3d.com (the demo can view files freely.) https://www.dropbox.com/s/n1l6ll96bhh5ju6/Glyphtionary%203D.3dm
do you have examples. Most of us aren't good at decoding and don't bother with them
ReplyDeleteHere's one 6qd7cryptoz4u8s
ReplyDeleteso "cryptoz" keeps repeating?
ReplyDeleteHannah and gluon also repeated. I am going to start sorting through and compile a list
ReplyDeleteThere are several names in the Passcodes of which I have never heard before... I wonder if they can be fortelling of people we may meet in the future? I've wanted to create a database of interesting code words but haven't gotten far enough on my "to do" list yet. Might be an interesting research project for someone here.... Any thoughts on that?
ReplyDeleteSince I brought up the topic, I would like to investigate it further. I will bring what I have to the group once compiled.
ReplyDeleteThis is interesting...http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gluon, scroll down to gluon colors
ReplyDeleteThat is interesting. I may have scanned over the data too quickly to have ingested it correctly, but from the diagram it appeared that the combination of both green and blue color charges creates an anti-red. Very curious. I look forward to a full report.
ReplyDeletethe most recent code i've received has the word "CLAMANTIS" in it.
ReplyDelete"C LA MANTIS"?
someone going to bite the head off their lover in LA, C(alifornia)?
so i looked up Clamantis in wikipedia and there's isn't anything for the word on its own, but there is for "Vox Clamantis" (or "the voice of one crying out").
ReplyDeletehttp://en.m.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?search=CLAMANTIS
Drew Dondero actually the keyword itself is just "crypto" -- these keywords get padded out with alphanumeric prefixes and suffixes, that z is just part of a suffix that didn't get trimmed.
ReplyDeleteThey have all repeated, another strange one is hozho...seems to fit in exactly with the Jarvis shards, At point 8 of this article http://www.robertsdrake.com/files/Hozho.htm
ReplyDeleteMartin Gorecki here are some dates / keywords:
ReplyDeletehttps://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0ApMOqw3tl1XAdFlER3UycjIwYlFodlIyQ1FCVVEyTVE#gid=0
Rory Durkin you rock! I will start diving in and determining the connection
ReplyDeleteMy list was pulled from a hangout. Also, there is this one which is more detailed:
ReplyDeletehttps://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/pub?key=0AnGIsuxwQcyXdGJ5WkVaY2JVWGlUTEdNZ09IMkVqZUE&gid=1
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shatkona... I pulled this information from here:http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yantra which Yantra was the latest key word in the passcodes. I am still putting together a graph of how these words fit in, but this one I had to post as it is to familiar. Overlap the two faction logos and we get the Yantra
ReplyDeleteYantras are visual meditations. rather the opposite to the Clamantis i mentioned getting on a recent passcode.
ReplyDelete