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BCR

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Posts posted by BCR

  1. The DOS copy command can be used to concatenate LOC files and all tools I use can read the resulting file.

     

    D:\Downloads>dir g?.loc
    Volume in drive D is DATA
    Volume Serial Number is 60C0-2B06
    
    Directory of D:\Downloads
    
    03/16/2005  07:29p               5,523 g1.loc
    03/16/2005  06:55p               5,382 g2.loc
    03/16/2005  06:56p               5,343 g3.loc
    03/16/2005  06:57p               5,390 g4.loc
    03/16/2005  06:57p               5,294 g5.loc
    03/16/2005  06:58p               5,345 g6.loc
    03/16/2005  06:59p               5,398 g7.loc
    03/16/2005  06:59p               5,132 g8.loc
    03/16/2005  07:00p               5,435 g9.loc
    03/16/2005  07:00p               5,479 ga.loc
                 10 File(s)         53,721 bytes
                  0 Dir(s)  25,196,768,768 bytes free
    
    D:\Downloads>copy g?.loc caches.loc
    g1.loc
    g2.loc
    g3.loc
    g4.loc
    g5.loc
    g6.loc
    g7.loc
    g8.loc
    g9.loc
    ga.loc
           1 file(s) copied.
    
    D:\Downloads>
    

  2. It sure looks invisible to me. Looks like one finding it is kind of exposed to muggles passing by on that sidewalk.

    im not too sure about the cache and its hidey hole, but i like the camera strap! :tired:

    Hey! That's not a camera strap. That's lanyard of my Garmin Legend.

     

    Hints: pnpur vf va gur yrsg unys bs gur cubgb, ba gur tebhaq, naq ebhaq

  3. We love to find golf balls in caches, near caches and anywere around caches. Not cause we play golf but because we turn them into cache containers.

    I like golf balls. I like them a lot.

     

    Below is my own golf ball cache container creation.

    golfball29qg.jpg

    golfball10fa.jpg

     

    I never deployed it (reason would be considered off topic here).

  4. How can a very long string of letters be turned into a short coordinate?

     

    The solution to some puzzle caches spell the coordinates. For instance, N 59° 54.400 E 010° 43.100 can be represented as "north fifty-nine degrees fifty-four and four-hundred minutes, east ten degrees forty three and one-hundred minutes" or "five nine five four point four zero zero one zero four three point one zero zero".

     

    It's not uncommon for the text to be cryptogram, a simple substitution cipher. ROT13 is a substitution cipher that is particularly simple because it is a shift cipher - each letter is shifted +13.

     

    Even without knowing binary, exclusive disjunction, or ASCII, one can get lucky on the XOR 96 just guessing that the answer is coordinates represented in the standard format:

     

     N  5  9  °  5  4  .  4  0  0  E  0  1  0  °  4  3  .  1  0  0
    D8 A3 AF B6 A3 A2 B8 A3 A0 AF B6 D3 A7 A6 B6 A2 A5 B8 A5 A2 A5
    

     

    Even though the bogus coordinates aren't correct, it's close enough that most people can guess the pattern.

  5. Just MHO, but good cammo jobs are not the best for micros, those can be hidden almost anywhere.

     

    YES, I agree whole-heartedly! It's becoming common in my area for a camouflaged chapstick container or bison tube to be hidden in the woods. While creativity in the container is appreciated, why not try camouflaging a larger container if the hide is going to be out in the woods? Or hide the micro in a park? The right container for the right location!

     

    Two techniques that one or two cache hiders here think is cool:

    1) Multicache: use a label maker to print tiny coordinates and the stick the label on a foot bridge over a creek in a park. There's lots of surface area to search. Underneath the bridge is fair game. Gauranteed lots of fun for the hider as searchers get frustrated.

     

    2) Multicache: use a Sharpie pen to write graffiti coordinates on the playground equipment. Again lots of surface area to search and if the cacher doesn't have small children, they are sure to be seen as park weirdos. Ha ha ha! Those crazy hiders.

     

    FYI, I do not condone either of the above techniques, in fact I discourage these. Note, these extra stages are almost always superfluous.

  6. Premium MOCs are rare in my area and the few that do exist aren't very good. Nonetheless, there are some non-Premium-member cachers that take it as a challenge to find Premium MOCs. Basically, they seek the cache with only the waypoint name and coordinates (sometimes approximate). Laerning how to get the coordinates is a puzzle. No description, no hints, no known container size, etc. Caches that are not at the specified coordinates (puzzle caches and offset caches) are problematic when hunted this way.

  7. Situation Normal All Fouled Up

     

    An Error Has Occured

     

    The process cannot access the file "e:\caches\xml\162738\162738.xml" because it is being used by another process.

  8. You have reached your maximum number (50) of caches to watch.

     

    I found it strange that it now says the maximum # of caches that one can watch is only 50. Why the change from 100 to 50?

     

    Was there a reply to this change elsewhere? I missed any notification. :(

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