Sentences with phrase «ciphers at»

Not exact matches

At once the host diminished to a tiny o: an empty cipher, like some solar disc imploding on itself.
You're just a cipher to be swayed one way or another, with arguments and guilt trips being thrown at you from all sides.
The former wartime Land Girl on Lloyd George's farm, and translator of German naval ciphers for the code - breakers at Bletchley Park, went out in suitable style, however: throwing a farewell lunch party for 50 friends including Sir John Major in the Palace of Westminster — where she regaled guests with a song — before a final, majestic, pearls and fur - clad appearance in the Lords chamber to take the oath one last time, to warm cheers from her peers.
It would be easy to compare the film to the gangster - full works of Tarantino, but where Tarantino is skilful at getting inside the characters of his lowlifes and making you care, Drew's motley crew of social misfits remain just movie - video ciphers, rather than the anti-heroes of an insightful social drama.
That glow can be measured at different wavelengths, which can be used to create a cipher and translate your message to code.
It centres on Tom Jericho, a brilliant student of Turing, who breaks one of the toughest ciphers, only to break himself after the end of a brief affair with a woman at BP.
John Nagy, author of Invisible Ink: Spycraft of the American Revolution, discusses the codes, ciphers, chemistry and psychology of spying in the American Revolution, in a talk recorded by podcast host Steve Mirsky at the historic Fraunces Tavern in New York City.
The one - time MacGruber comedian broadens his dramatic range but remains a cipher with little to do except act agape alongside us at his family's redneck behavior.
Lara Croft does not emerge as a person with a personality, and the other actors are also ciphers, but the movie wisely confuses us with a plot so impenetrable that we never think about their personalities at all.
The characters emerge from their bonnets and beards to reveal themselves not as the simple ciphers they may at first seem (the pious Christians, the bourgeois couple) but as full - fledged individuals — thorny, scared, and searching.
or, «This uncontrollable cipher will be in the wrong lane of the road at a precise moment») as the cornerstones of its various intrigues.
Jennifer is 17, a black - clad, metal - pierced, acid - tongued, death - obsessed, tattoo - inked, self - mutilating yet poetically inclined cactus of an outsider, at odds with her schoolmates, her self - delusively sunny mother (Carol Kane), her cipher of a stepfather (Michael McKean), and her aging hippie of a father (John Goodman).
It's the film's most meaningful relationship, consummated through a monotonous routine that's an inadvertent metaphor for watching the movie: Like this emotionless cipher, all viewers can do is stare joylessly at the degradation on display.
He is a cipher of sorts, at times more of a representation of Joy's hopes and fears than his own self, but he is an engaging screen presence who faithfully fulfills his growth toward something quite different from where he started.
Of course, feeling for it is one thing, finding it is another matter (and not something to be attempted in six laps of Grandrive), but at least it seems the R32 speaks our language, that of mechanical grip, not the daunting, alien cipher of downforce.
One then finds the junction between the message's letter and the key phrase's letter on the Square (the message's letter on the left - hand side and the key phrase's letter on the top), and records the letter at their junction, as follows: Message: h o w, i s, t o n i g h t, d i f f e r e n t, f r o m, a l l, o t h e r, n i g h t s Key: c o m, e r, e t r i b u t, i o n c o m e r e, t r i b, u t i, o n c o m, e r e t r i Cipher: j c i, m i, x h e q h b m, l w s h s d i e x, y i w n, u e t, c g j s d, r z k a k a Deciphering the message entailed reversing the process by finding the cipher letter on the left - hand side of the Square and the key - phrase letter on the top side of the Square, and recording the letter at their junction.
She recalled the Norfolk and Western man's gentle teasing, I'll bet you loved ciphering in school, and at the sound of her name used in the same sentence as the word love, a surprising heat bloomed between her legs, rising, spreading, until her whole body burned and ached pleasantly.
During WWII he worked at Britain's code breaking center at Bletchley Park (located halfway between Oxford and Cambridge in what is now Milton Keynes), where he devised a number of techniques for breaking German ciphers.
Better navigation, including skipping to the next puzzle from within a current puzzle, clear all cipher entries for a puzzle in progress, and the ability to remove a single cipher entry is now conveniently located at the beginning of the alphabet list
Strider Hiryu is armed with a cipher - a sword that leaves an energy trail behind every slash - and a variety of mechanical and energy - based aides at his disposal, including an eagle and panther composed of plasma, and a small machine that gravitates around him that can be used to reflect projectiles.
Homages to the writers and friends at Tate St Ives and Turner Contemporary pay tribute to their affection for the sea as a cipher for the self
McClelland's constellations of ciphers evoke the sound of speech while at the same time, her repetition of a single word creates a highly personal poetry about the shifting, often elusive nature of meaning.
At the Met Breuer's recent exhibition «Delirious: Art and the Limits of Reason», I was struck by evidence that the grid — often a structural cipher for rationality in Western art — could be used to demonstrate its opposite.
Taking its title from the dark 80s teen cult comedy by the same name, Heathers takes a look at pop culture's (and pop cinema's) co-option of contemporary art and its «impulse to vampirise levity as a cipher for criticality and de-subjectivisation».
The viewers also look at the gorgeously rendered red cipher and are invited to contemplate our own lives and spirit.
Overall sales in World Art and Science & Books were # 123.6 m, up 3 % ($ 160.1 m, down 1 %), with highlights including a world auction record for an enigma cipher machine that sold for $ 547,500 to an online bidder during New York's June Books and Manuscripts sale, and Albert Einstein's telescope, which sold for $ 432,500 in New York in December, setting a world auction record for any scientific object owned by Einstein offered at auction.
To illustrate my position, Dr. Lawrence Torcello, a philosopher at the Rochester Institute of Technology, put it succinctly: ``... Some issues are of such ethical magnitude that being on the correct side of history becomes a cipher of moral character for generations to come.
These export restrictions required that all symmetric ciphers be capped at a small enough key size that they could be feasibly cracked by US intelligence agencies.
Just came across this blog and very helpful to those like myself who aren't too good at arithmetic or ciphering....
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