Codex Copiale: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
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Quelle: Youtube | Quelle: Youtube Deutscher Beitrag BILD-Zeitung | ||
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Quelle: Youtube Originalbeitrag | |||
Spurce: University of California | |||
USC's Professor Kevin Knight is part of an international team that finally cracked the "Copiale Cipher," a strange, 105-page message handwritten in abstract symbols and Latin letters revealing the rituals and political leanings of a 18th-century secret society in Germany. | |||
Knight, a computer scientist at the USC Information Sciences Institute, is now targeting other famous unsolved codes, such as the last section of "Kryptos," an encrypted message carved into a granite sculpture on the grounds of the CIA headquarters. | |||
But the trickiest language puzzle of all remains everyday speech. "Translation remains a tough challenge for artificial intelligence," he says. | |||
Learn more about the University of Southern California: [http://www.usc.edu] | |||
Learn more about the USC Information Sciences Institute: [http://www3.isi.edu/home] | |||
<videoflash>Eam0Tk-1FyI</videoflash> |
Version vom 6. November 2011, 21:05 Uhr
Videos
Quelle: Youtube Deutscher Beitrag BILD-Zeitung
<videoflash>Hf6qr3TwM-8</videoflash>
Quelle: Youtube Originalbeitrag
Spurce: University of California
USC's Professor Kevin Knight is part of an international team that finally cracked the "Copiale Cipher," a strange, 105-page message handwritten in abstract symbols and Latin letters revealing the rituals and political leanings of a 18th-century secret society in Germany.
Knight, a computer scientist at the USC Information Sciences Institute, is now targeting other famous unsolved codes, such as the last section of "Kryptos," an encrypted message carved into a granite sculpture on the grounds of the CIA headquarters.
But the trickiest language puzzle of all remains everyday speech. "Translation remains a tough challenge for artificial intelligence," he says.
Learn more about the University of Southern California: [1]
Learn more about the USC Information Sciences Institute: [2]
<videoflash>Eam0Tk-1FyI</videoflash>