TRPL 5

 

TRPL 5 also written as 555, is an esoteric, subcultural, movement; born out of DIY ethics "in game" resulting in some Pexyll community members exploring what is believed to be an Alternate Reality Game within Pexyll. Among this Pexyll community, it is called the Invisible ARG, the Invisible War, DOS-TRPL 5, Triple Five or simply TRPL 5


On 359 UCE, several cycles within the initial launch of Pexyll, TromyNet and early YnntaNet chat discourse began when an image file was discovered and uploaded to the Pexyll board /rc/ , random-curious. 


The image was said to have been discovered when a decompiler was used on an Adsign's source node files during a routine system review. The scanning of the Adsign source node was prompted due to the Adsign’s displaying high level paracausalities. It was reported that the Adsign behaved unusually, its screen physically blinking, completely in and out of existence, showing the digital construction within the machine. But the Adsign was not listed on any maps provided for Pexyllers by any GMUC compliant or affiliated companies. Once decompiled, the image data was discovered, initially looking like a benign node map, but with five other source nodes circled in red and marked with SSY-DOS-5505.


(enter image of map here)


It was initially disregarded as a random Pexyllers map that was accidentally trash encoded to the adsign during the repair process initiated by the TRYMM-7 exie, from the NTN toolkit program provided by Pexyll Labs. But eventually someone ran the file through a Steganography image editor and discovered a string of words written in an archaic branch of the GMUC text encoding standard called Dgoyiin, written as a cipher. Once translated it read as a poem stating…


“We stand here in the fall-out, ravaged by Arksys, from a war, that took place in O-Space, that might be considered a thousand, lifetimes away and still, here we stand feeling the ripple effects of a conflict of conscious minds having gone about as bad as it can go.”  

  • signed SSY-DOS.




Community members recognized the map as the east of Ariel in the Skaleenuar Ohnyluh, pointing to five corresponding locations on the map. They discovered that 4 Adsign of the obsolete Ixvey model contained encoded text files written in Dgoyiin. Each was discovered to be a single line that when combined read…


“the fringe pioneers, those early Logiksmith who used the original Ohkeyos 

and found some of the first Ohny Relics set out to plot the extent of O-Space 

and to record the extent of damage done by the DLE, never came back.

But their information, like a stone in rippling water, did.”   


The last location on the SSY-DOS-5505 map, contained an encrypted File Archiver. The community quickly realized that both Dgoyiin passages mentioned ripples and decided the key must be the word “ripple”. When the File Archiver was opened they found nearly a lifetime's worth of data, featuring images, audio, and maps of uncharted lands, unknown species and the beginnings of an Arkyne index.




SSY-DOS-5505

The Pexyll community decided to call the unofficial community project TRPL 5, since the Adsigns were all unlisted TRPL 5 sources attached to unlisted TRPL 1 nodes and the signature of the original map ended with the numbers 5505.

Pexyll Labs initially spoke publicly to concerned parties dismissing the rumors of the TRPL 5 sources and items as part of a YnntaNet urban legend being perpetuated by certain Pexyllers for unknown and nefarious purposes or as a practical joke. But as video evidence of more File Archivers being discovered within these unlisted malfunctioning source devices surfaced, belief that someone outside of the incorporated O-Space had infiltrated the local network spread.

While the TRPL filesystem has numerous levels of paranatural potentiality, the TRPL 5 level is considered the paracausality hazard threshold of incompatible or obsolete data and beyond; it is an unstable state in which nothing is supposed to be able to function or be recoverable. Pexyll Labs generally warns Pexyllers, especially new Pexyllers from seeking out, approaching or attempting to access, code, files or any information from these source devices. 

The affected nodes, objects and devices are considered highly unstable and potentially volatile as they can not support the conditions of TRPL 5 level infection under their normal format circumstances. Their limited storage capacities, requiring specific reduced file sizes, has ignited conversion attempts by the community in order to access this data, transferring it to better supported and modern formats.

More than 100 unlisted DOS-TRPL 5 source nodes have been found and shared across the Pexyll communities. Many of what are now called TRPL 5 relics have been decoded using unsanctioned and aftermarket toolkits as Pexyll Labs does not officially recognize the existence of the DOS-TRPL 5, file archives and so officially sanctioned toolkits can not properly decompress and stably render these files. 


Most of the encoded data, once decoded, have the arrangement of pages with maps, journals, equations, illustrations, photos and lines of code. Several members of the TRPL 5 community have been working together to not only collect these pages of information but to work together in order to arrange all of the pages into tomes.



Popular posts from this blog

Ohnyluh

Mobile Replication Unit

Shiro Network