I thought, English has no tetragraphs ....

It is very hard to give hints on this without spoiling too much. It took me extremely long to beat this challenge, after the first - pretty straightforward - stage you should take a closer look into what you have done so far. Perhaps you might to write down what you found out so far (this does not necessarily mean the decrypted text itself)AMindForeverVoyaging wrote:The word "tetragraph" seems to have at least two somewhat differing meanings, one in linguistics (which is what cyberwoozle means) and one in cryptography (which is what laz0r means).
But that is not really the problem here. I have deciphered the text completely, and nevertheless I am totally and utterly stuck and don't know what to do next.
It most certainly is possible, however that is beside the point.cyberwoozle wrote:My problem is rather willing (or not willing) than being a blockhead: I've decoded the three sentences (in- and excluding interpunctuation) and since i'm pretty sure, that it is not possible to encrypt two different plaintexts with two different algorithms and get the same ciphertext (the one from the challenge), my conclusion is to continue with analyzing the decrypted sentences in any way and not to concentrate on the original ciphertext again.
And here i'm stuck - even with snibril's hint (standard Unix tools) as well as with the tetragraph hint
And don't worry, you haven't alienated me - the only thing which drives me mad is, that i was at the same point a year ago and i thought, maybe i can refresh my efforts in this one .....