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  2. Book cipher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_cipher

    Book cipher. The King James Bible, a highly available publication suitable for the book cipher. A book cipher is a cipher in which each word or letter in the plaintext of a message is replaced by some code that locates it in another text, the key . A simple version of such a cipher would use a specific book as the key, and would replace each ...

  3. The Secret (treasure hunt) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Secret_(treasure_hunt)

    Book. Clues for where the treasures were buried are provided in a puzzle book named The Secret produced by Byron Preiss and first published by Bantam in 1982. The book was authored by Sean Kelly and Ted Mann and illustrated by John Jude Palencar, John Pierard, and Overton Loyd; JoEllen Trilling, Ben Asen, and Alex Jay also contributed to the book.

  4. Police code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_code

    Police code. A police code is a brevity code, usually numerical or alphanumerical, used to transmit information between law enforcement over police radio systems in the United States. Examples of police codes include "10 codes" (such as 10-4 for "okay" or "acknowledged"—sometimes written X4 or X-4), signals, incident codes, response codes, or ...

  5. Cain's Jawbone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cain's_Jawbone

    Puzzle. The puzzle consists of a 100-page prose narrative with its pages arranged in the wrong order. The first edition is part of a hardback book. The second edition is a boxed set of page-cards. To solve the puzzle, the reader must determine the correct order of the pages and also the names of the murderers and victims within the story.

  6. The Lost Symbol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lost_Symbol

    The Lost Symbol is a 2009 novel written by American writer Dan Brown. [2] [3] It is a thriller set in Washington, D.C., after the events of The Da Vinci Code, and relies on Freemasonry for both its recurring theme and its major characters. [4] Released on September 15, 2009, it is the third Brown novel to involve the character of Harvard ...

  7. The Code Book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Code_Book

    978-1-85702-879-9. OCLC. 59459928. The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography is a book by Simon Singh, published in 1999 by Fourth Estate and Doubleday . The Code Book describes some illustrative highlights in the history of cryptography, drawn from both of its principal branches, codes and ciphers.

  8. Playfair cipher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Playfair_cipher

    Playfair cipher. The Playfair cipher uses a 5×5 grid of letters, and encrypts a message by breaking the text into pairs of letters and swapping them according to their positions in a rectangle within that grid: "HI" becomes "BM". The Playfair cipher or Playfair square or Wheatstone–Playfair cipher is a manual symmetric encryption technique ...

  9. Memorabilia (Xenophon) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memorabilia_(Xenophon)

    The Memorabilia contains 39 chapters broken into four books; Book I contains 7 chapters, Book II contains 10 chapters, Book III contains 14 chapters, and Book IV contains 8 chapters. The overall organization of the Memorabilia is not always easy to make out: Book I.