Result:
20511.30738.62758
The theory here is that we are looking for an IP address. Is there a Q-drop that points to further decoding with this in mind?
Look back at the first two: Q2096 and Q1332
“United We Stand (WW)” “WWG1WGA”
As Q has stated many times over “You have more than you know”
WWG1WGA has been in front of us the whole time!
WWG1WGA = WWW G1GA WWW = World Wide Web – WW World Wide - “As the world turns”.
WWW G1GA = 23 23 23 7 1 7 1 – 23 23 23 17 17 Pain - Q
Take WWG1WGA and convert to numeral = 23 – 23 – 7 – 1 – 23 - 7 – 1 = 5 – 5 – 7 – 1 – 5 – 7 – 1
Convert spacing of time stamps to 5 – 5 – 7 – 1 – 5 – 7 – 1
Result:
20511.30738.62758
13633.41704.32113
42556.29501.05039
11293.21142.45103
59743.20121.75134
01071.05845.91229
46591.11848.40449
90107.10243.31100
08743.20642.33333
29404.49829.37846
33743.20936.08121
14109.01071.05845
19360.87432.06423
98293.74044.99424
10121.75111.00151
91229.94242.40449
33359.64233.74320
25223.90107.64611
26851.38845.27449
08642.33846.59845
93310.28111.15305
86470.71158.46851
45123.12812.48123
47051.11857.62756
92811.10482.49424
11371.61111.28125
Add each set: 20511. = 9. 30738. = 21. 6275810. = 29.
Result:
9.21.29.2.12
16.16.15.5.29
22.16.15.5.29
16.10.19.2.23
28.6.24.5.3.13.9
9.22.36.2.14
25.22.34.2.18
17.10.11.3.14
22.14.29.1.22
19.32.42.1.22
20.20.24.1.16
15.9.24.0.13
19.24.21.3.19
31.19.39.1.14
5.15.9.4.11.25.5
23.21.31.9.28
23.18.28.6.21
14.17.21.2.15
22.28.29.1.10
20.24.40.1.12
16.13.15.2.31
25.22.33.1.14
15.14.29.2.8
21.22.39.4.31
21.15.34.0.15
13.10.22.6.22
This gives 26 rows = 8
Note: the first three numbers in the first row – 9 16 22 = I P V = IPv internet protocol!
Continuing in this manner, as demonstrated in previous decoding methods, order sets of numbers starting at the top of row 1 and moving down then back up at bottom of row 2.
Example: 9.16.22.16. - Divide by sets of four to maintain an IPv series.
Revert each new series by one shift, just like the ordering of the D5 drops.
Example: 9.16.22.16 - 16.22.16.28 - 22.16.28.9 …..
This produces an extremely large bank of IP addresses!
I have included the first few examples as to include all would push this tutorial back by another week or so and would take up valuable space in the forum.
Note: It seems to work no matter which way you run the numbers. Starting first row-top moving down then back up from second row-bottom, or starting back at second-row top moving down, or starting at the last row-bottom and moving up, or moving from left to right or right to left. Just play around and have fun.