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UCLA floor tiles decoded, pay homage to first internet message (2013)

107 points| dempedempe | 2 years ago |newsroom.ucla.edu

24 comments

order

xu_ituairo|2 years ago

The Werner Herzog documentary ‘Lo and Behold’ opens with a great telling of this story.

Generally a great documentary about facets and characters of the internet.

UberFly|2 years ago

Thank you. I'll check this out.

jimmytucson|2 years ago

In case anyone else went to verify, note that the first character in the floor (01101100) is lowercase “l”, not the uppercase “L” (01001100) which was actually transmitted.

Kim_Bruning|2 years ago

Also it reads from the bottom of the page to the top. (took me a minute to figure out ^^;;)

anilakar|2 years ago

I wonder how people have missed those obvious 011xxxxx and 010xxxxx patterns before. Once you've solved your first binary-to-ASCII puzzle you'll be guaranteed to spot that repeating prefix anywhere.

teo_zero|2 years ago

In fact, it was missed for some months only, the construction being completed by the end of 2011 and the first rumors circulating in May 2013.

The title makes it look like an event of a historical relevance, but it's not.

MatthiasPortzel|2 years ago

At the Case Western campus, there's a "binary walkway," which is decorated with paving stones which form 1s and 0s. It's commonly accepted that there's no message to them, but it's fun to think that it just hasn't been decoded yet.

syndicatedjelly|2 years ago

Probably the only redeeming feature architecturally about Boelter Hall.

- alum

MontagFTB|2 years ago

As a fellow alum, can confirm. North campus got all the aesthetics. South campus got “the bomb shelter”.

rcme|2 years ago

Something about the story doesn’t add up. Plenty of places use single-color vinyl tiles. Why did the contractor so urgently need a pattern to put on the floor?

em-bee|2 years ago

well probably a type of tiles had been chosen, but no particular color, or even it may have been decided to use multiple colors, but the choice if which pattern to use had not been made yet. could have been forgotten about as it is not something that needs to be decided early.

frob|2 years ago

> “We succeeded in transmitting the ‘L’ … and the ‘O’ — and then the system crashed,” Kleinrock said. “Hence, the first message on the Internet was ‘LO’ — as in ‘Lo and behold!’ We didn’t plan it, but we couldn’t have come up with a better message: short and prophetic.”

I like to take this story one step further. After doing some work, the two tried again. And, of course, they tried to log in. So the first three letters typed across the internet were "LOL".

trashburger|2 years ago

This is the version I remember hearing about too! It's very fitting.

karaterobot|2 years ago

Worth noting that article is from 2013, the year the pattern was decoded, which was two years after the building was finished.

hirsin|2 years ago

Thank you for that context! It's so glaringly obviously ASCII that I was unsure why it would have taken so long to decode.