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When my best friend wrote his yearbook message to me in 5-bit binary, I didn't the slightest idea of how to translate it. Can anyone please tell me what he could have possibly said?

00001 01010 01101 00000 10001 11000 01010 10010 00111 00000 10001 00011. -01001 00000 01010 00100 01100 00111 00000 00110 10010!

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  • Which encoding and endianness?
    – user142019
    Jun 9, 2011 at 16:05
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    It says "Be sure to drink your Ovaltine." At least, that's what my decoder pin gave me...
    – Donut
    Jun 9, 2011 at 16:07
  • She obviously doesn't know. Neither do I. 0 and 1 are in there, so not ascii. I was thinking 5 bit bcd with an 'a=1' type code, but that gives ajm or bkn as the first 3, and it don't make sense.
    – captncraig
    Jun 9, 2011 at 16:08
  • I vote gibberish, or some really odd, nonstandard encoding.
    – captncraig
    Jun 9, 2011 at 16:09
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    5 bit bcd with a=1 gives what initially looks like gibberish, though with a bit of playing around, you can pull out the phrase BINARY IS HARD. -JAKE MHAGS!, where MHAGS is presumably a misspelling of Jake's last name. Note that the educated guessing involved fixing numerous typos, inserting spaces, etc. B K N A R Y K S H A R D J A K E M H A G S
    – Sysyphus
    Jun 9, 2011 at 16:19

1 Answer 1

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5 bit bcd with a=0 gives what initially looks like gibberish, though with a bit of playing around, you can pull out the phrase BINARY IS HARD. -JAKE MHAGS!, where MHAGS is presumably a misspelling of Jake's last name. Note that the educated guessing involved fixing numerous typos, inserting spaces, etc.
B K N A R Y K S H A R D J A K E M H A G S

Now in answer form instead of as a comment.

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    Alternatively, if one assumes it's an anagram, rather than him having made typos, it could decode to something like Shy Handbag Jerks! -Markka, which I think is a much more interesting answer ;).
    – Sysyphus
    Jun 9, 2011 at 16:28
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    My favorite is "Bad Hag Shanks Jerky Mark"
    – captncraig
    Jun 9, 2011 at 16:34

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