don of tallahassee > 25-05-2016, 01:55 PM
don of tallahassee > 26-05-2016, 04:22 PM
-JKP- > 27-05-2016, 02:40 AM
(26-05-2016, 04:22 PM)don of tallahassee Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view....
I know many of the leading lights in the group trying to solve the puzzle of the VMS do not like that my scheme seems to show some way to construct and deconstruct the VMS words. For some of them, it would obviate years of work trying to find a solution using more modern techniques to account for an early Fifteenth Century manuscript. For others, that fact that the scheme cannot be made to fit any known language's words as a direct deciphering/transposition scheme of some sort or another is anathema. That's okay....
don of tallahassee > 27-05-2016, 06:30 AM
-JKP- > 27-05-2016, 07:36 AM
(27-05-2016, 06:30 AM)don of tallahassee Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view....
I think the matter of position in lines of words will depend most on what the subject of the book is and how the info is being transmitted (what each of the six code groups are doing or about)...
Don, if it were only this (line ends varying based on content) then I probably wouldn't have mentioned it.
But this is something different. Just as the "words" have a certain way of being constructed, it appears that lines (or possibly the ends of lines) also have a certain way of being constructed. Look through some of the dense-text pages (especially scan down the right-hand sides) and you might see what I'm talking about.
But, I don't think I fully grasp your grammar parts idea. Is this like a base word with additions that show it is an infinitive because of an appended code and a verb because of another code? And the next word's base word is modified by showing it to be a noun and plural.
Or is it nearer to the base word 'pend' being modified by adding 'com' to the front and "ium" to the other end? The 'ium' ending would maybe be used for all past participles or some such?
Or am I missing some basic part of your explanation? Could you send me a draft copy of this part of your work, please. I'm always seeking new explanations that may work better than my own ideas. I won't be picky about the loose ends.
It's hard for me to answer this because I think I've figured out some of them but others are not so clear and until I get at least a couple more, I won't know if I have to tweak the first ones. It's a bit like a Rubik's cube where you have to be willing to tear apart what you have to get to the last step.
Here's what I can say... it appears to me, so far, that the rules are fairly constrained (just as the "syllables" are quite constrained), in other words, limited to basic necessities in the grammatical sense. I'd prefer to work this out in more detail before submitting it. As you've probably realized now from my previous post, I'm reluctant to post half-baked stuff (or to send it privately to others). Even writing a blog is hard for me because the blogging format, by necessity, means simplifying things, sometimes almost to the point of absurdity (papers are better, they can be longer and more detailed but I can't spare the time for papers right now).
Are you propounding some sort of readable text instead of lists of things? That would make more sense than my ideas of what it's all about.
Yes, I am. "Readable text" might not be the best way to describe it, but it goes beyond lists. These "atoms" have a relationship to each other and I believe some have specialized grammatical functions (like modification).
I created my own VMS font long ago (I've never used the EVA font) and also my own transcription of the text, and discovered, after working on this for a while, that I could type what was going to come next with a fairly high degree of accuracy before I had seen it. Not long parts, usually only 2, 4 or 6 characters, but that in itself says something about how the text has been constructed.
One of my earlier comparisons of the VMS words was to the early IBM punch cards .... If no info was encoded for a field, the machine and the human reader could still figure out what was being encoded for the other fields because there were rules to consistently be followed for each card's set of fields.
This is a VERY good example and it is, in fact, possible to figure out some of the faint, scratched, partially covered, and hard-to-read parts of the manuscript once you grok the rules. Not all—there is more to it than that, there are word-tokens in between the predictable sequences that are uncommon or unique, but the proportion of predictable sequences is quite high and I think people should take note of your analogy.
Koen G > 27-05-2016, 06:46 PM
don of tallahassee > 28-05-2016, 12:30 AM
don of tallahassee > 02-06-2016, 02:36 AM
don of tallahassee > 02-06-2016, 03:59 AM
don of tallahassee > 24-07-2016, 03:21 PM