Update: Xyzse has revealed that we're trying to get an account and the pw to it. Wait, he did say we have to contact ...
Overall: the main things to look at:
_We are looking for an account and password of Yahoo!
_The puzzle is on Gaia (or so i remember he told me that)
_The three philosopher mentioned: Pyrrho, Archimedes? A bore might be a stoic
_Rondeau, a style of poetry!! Going in a circle, repeating certain elements, in other words a RING! "
_Deal was mentioned
_“To be considered create a string” String is also a theory
_“Pass key, the title, middle and more?”
_Fermat's little theorem (Fermat's first prime o_O?)
_Raison d'Etre
_Xyzse said: " I will know if someone cracked this key, since I will get something if they do."
_Xyzse said: "I will receive an almost immediate notice if someone does find out"
All the clues are found throughout the thread since people posted stuff that related to the puzzle. I can't help but to bring bits of the info here
_It is similar to Notpron
_Deal was mentioned, so perhaps, the second possibility is that xyzse posted it on a random page in DEAL, we have to figure out which page
_it is hidden in a weird way throught the poem.
“To be considered create a string” string = any series of things arranged or connected in a line or following closely one after another
“Find the one hurrahing, one exclaiming” Archimedes?
“Pass key, the title, middle and more?” Nothing again. XD
In others such as France, engagement rings usually mount a colored gem rather than a diamond (imitates french model to sing? x_X)
Fermat's little theorem (Fermat's first prime o_O?)
Pierre de Fermat – French Lawyer
SO T IF THIS DNT FAPESAFPTTTST (Taking out all of the letters in the poem that aren't capitalized, most likely going in wrong direction)
Elis is on Southern Greece, hosts oylimpic games.. Pyrrho was the philosopher.. i wasn't cheating! XD
“Firstly we must ask what things are andhow they are constituted. Secondly, we ask how we are related to these things. Thirdly, we ask what ought to be our attitude towards them. Pyrrho's answer was that things are indistiguishable, unmesurable and undecidable and no more this than that, or both this and that and neither this nor that. Therefore, he said, our senses neither tell us tuths nor lie”
Just noticed, X said ring. Ring could also mean a sound or a call! =OOO
As well, there are many different definitions of form. X is always looking on another side.
“Now your mind to get this deal in our store” Either DEAL the store, or trying to get the letter cheap which is a deal.
“There is more to this, given as warning,
This is the first gate, the second you will abhor,” Just means we are at the easy part?
“One that I’ve not used at all before” Means I should go back to all of X’s threads. =3
“Don’t forfeit your chance so please wring” means don’t give up. XD
Also, I know that there are at least 3 stages. Could be more… but can’t be less.
Raison d'Etre – A reason to exist
I know its wrong since I haven't seen any one do what I ask. "
I read back alot and found alot of clues people left. Since they posted it publicly, i believe it is meant to be used =]
"Imitating a french model to sing is the poem's form. A villanelle is a take off of the french style. A bore might be a stoic, if we're doing philosphers. The pass key is the key that can get you anywhere. "
" Yes that must be it! O___O Rondeau, a style of poetry!! Going in a circle, repeating certain elements, in other words a RING! "
"Xyzse wrote:
Well Demo, that is why it is a different way of looking at things.
Besides, one would think that because I am using a style of poem I've never used before, it would force me to use similar words more than once.That is the limitation of form.
OneOfLittleHarmony
The only known Fermat primes are
F(0) = 3 (1)
F(1) = 5 (2)
F(2) = 17 (3)
F(3) = 257 (4)
F(4) = 65537 (5)
(Sloane's A019434), and it seems unlikely that any more will be found using current computational methods and hardware. It follows that 2^n+1 is prime for the special case n=0 together with the Fermat prime indices, giving the sequence 2, 3, 5, 17, 257, and 65537 (Sloane's A092506).
F(0) = 3 (1)
F(1) = 5 (2)
F(2) = 17 (3)
F(3) = 257 (4)
F(4) = 65537 (5)
(Sloane's A019434), and it seems unlikely that any more will be found using current computational methods and hardware. It follows that 2^n+1 is prime for the special case n=0 together with the Fermat prime indices, giving the sequence 2, 3, 5, 17, 257, and 65537 (Sloane's A092506).
