1995-01-03 - Re: Stegno for Kids

Header Data

From: “Robert A. Hayden” <hayden@krypton.mankato.msus.edu>
To: Hadmut Danisch <danisch@ira.uka.de>
Message Hash: 60d01f2bf275d895ad4a63cf307f69d476ff473ba64695d416d470db84c0ff23
Message ID: <Pine.ULT.3.91.950103140953.24233A-100000@krypton.mankato.msus.edu>
Reply To: <9501031834.AA21554@elysion.iaks.ira.uka.de>
UTC Datetime: 1995-01-03 20:11:05 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 3 Jan 95 12:11:05 PST

Raw message

From: "Robert A. Hayden" <hayden@krypton.mankato.msus.edu>
Date: Tue, 3 Jan 95 12:11:05 PST
To: Hadmut Danisch <danisch@ira.uka.de>
Subject: Re: Stegno for Kids
In-Reply-To: <9501031834.AA21554@elysion.iaks.ira.uka.de>
Message-ID: <Pine.ULT.3.91.950103140953.24233A-100000@krypton.mankato.msus.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


On Tue, 3 Jan 1995, Hadmut Danisch wrote:

> I had something like that as a toy about 20 years ago. A single pen with
> tips on both sides. One to write, the other to develop. Didn't they have it
> in America also?

There was also this thing where you would get these books and a magic 
marker, and they you would do puzzles in the book, and use the pen to 
develope the answer.

The old Infocom hint books also used a similiar setup.

____        Robert A. Hayden       <=> hayden@krypton.mankato.msus.edu
\  /__          -=-=-=-=-          <=>          -=-=-=-=-
 \/  /  Finger for Geek Code Info  <=> All I want is a cure...  
   \/   Finger for PGP Public Key  <=>      And all my friends back!






Thread