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In article tLV7g.5107$re6.1672@trndny04, HFguy wrote:
Mark Zenier wrote: In article hM67g.1131$Zf3.73@trndny01, HFguy wrote: .... How do you send Morse code by tapping on a pipe when all you can send is a 'dit'? They don't. They use a counting code where the alphabet is represented as a 5x5 or 6x6 (for cyrillic) matrix and then they use a count for row and column. It was described in Koestler's "Darkness at Noon", a novel about the Stalinist Purges, but I've read that a 5x5 version is used in the west. Unless you're a US Airman in a North Vietnamese POW prison, they used Morse using a tap/scrape for dot/dash. Does the book say how the new prisoners learned about the code matrix if they couldn't talk to the other prisoners? Maybe they passed around a diagram of the matrix. It's prison folklore, not something complicated. A verbal description wouldn't take much time. Most probably, it was scratched on the wall of the cell. Dig, dig. There's a couple of pages on it in "The Codebreakers" by David Kahn, in the chapter on Russian Codes and Codebreaking. It stated that experienced senders could get 10-15 words a minute. The example given for the 5x5 Latin alphabet combined i and j into one. Mark Zenier Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com) |
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