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4-10-2007 12:41 PM
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15 Comments   | Add a Comment
4-10-2007 3:21 PM
lavalice
beautiful but i still didn't figure out how to save it to my cliparts
4-10-2007 4:12 PM
xbeckyax
I like it, I feel really bright & clever now too seeing as though only 55 out of 100 can read it, I did it no problem ;-D buzzin'
4-10-2007 7:32 PM
oscarrob
Cool. I'm not sure that being in the 55th percentile is all that impressive, but I liked it.
4-11-2007 5:47 AM
fudzzz
holy crap! that was awesome...nice stuff...gave me flashbacks of my world of warcraft days and the infinite amount of grammatical and spelling errors in the chatbox there...no one had a problem reading anything, and now i know why...good post, popped
4-11-2007 6:17 PM
skymerci
that's absolutely great !
and not only because i managed to read it even though english is not the first my language.
tanhk you vrey mcuh
4-11-2007 6:53 PM
Sorgalim
We are getting a lot of practice with those...they are really good...thank you...
4-11-2007 10:37 PM
johnlam
I wonder if this can help in Scrabble strategy.
4-12-2007 8:26 AM
thisnamecantbetaken
This is from National Geographics "Think Again" campaign.

I though ALL people could read it. I thought it was an inherent part of how the the human brain works. Oh well, I had no trouble reading it. Has anyone else?
4-12-2007 2:24 PM
maedko
anyone who can read can read it. whoever added the 55/100 part only wanted to feel better about himself.
4-12-2007 5:05 PM
daninus14
mmmm, i think that 55/100 is a lie, I still havent net anyone who cant read it...
4-12-2007 5:40 PM
midnightskiss
it's true, everyone should be able to read it, agreed with maedko they just want to feel better about themselves = )
4-13-2007 6:19 AM
mona
somehow i get the feeling that with the increase in email communication (especially in a time before firefox 2.0 with the integrated spellcheck) our minds have been more and more adapted to reading scrambled text, because people don't generally make a habit of going back and fixing their typos.
it also makes me wonder how applicable this is to other languages. i don't imagine it would work as effectively in Arabic, for example - even though the Arabic alphabet is also composed of 28 letters. however, in Arabic most (short) vowels are implied, not spelled out.
Perhaps this phenomenon only works in languages that use the roman alphabet...? Would be a fun experiment to carry out.
4-18-2007 4:27 AM
s3quel
Hey! I can raed tihs! It's garet to hvae scuh a profuewl bairn, hehehe...
4-22-2007 10:26 PM
bigjulie_chc
I cloud raer tihs as wlel, yppiee
4-28-2007 3:53 PM
ut1390
I think you mean "rdae"
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