International Code of Signals |
Message boards : Number crunching : International Code of Signals
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thinking_goose Send message Joined: 12 Nov 07 Posts: 119 Credit: 2,750,621 RAC: 0 |
Did the Kriegsmarine use this or any known abbreviations list? I've been reading a copy of the 1946 International Code of Signals, and I can't help but think we could have missed the message simply because the abbreviations and substitution codes would never be picked up by any normal dictionary. |
blub Send message Joined: 17 May 14 Posts: 7 Credit: 1,148,207 RAC: 0 |
They used some Codebooks to shorten the messages and get rid of to much predictable text passages (that part didn't work out too well) which were changed a few times during the war, for example the Wetterkurzschlüssel (~short weather code) for weather reports: http://www.wwiiarchives.net/servlet/action/document/index/98/0 |
thinking_goose Send message Joined: 12 Nov 07 Posts: 119 Credit: 2,750,621 RAC: 0 |
That's interesting. It looks like abbreviations such as Wetterkurzschlüssel/International Signal Code would be quite short, so a high chance of combinations being present due to random occurrence. That's a shame, because the ICS has a form of error correction which would otherwise be quite useful. |
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International Code of Signals