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Juq 195 | Premium

Since the number is 195 , it is a good candidate for an (most XOR challenges use a single‑byte key in the range 0‑255).

def main() -> None: if len(sys.argv) > 1: # read from file with open(sys.argv[1], 'r') as f: line = f.read().strip() else: # read from stdin line = sys.stdin.read().strip() juq 195

He swore under his breath and set the scanner to full spectral. The data stream painted a grim picture: a single humanoid form, curled in the fetal position. Low metabolic rate—induced hibernation, maybe. And a faint, irregular second heartbeat. Smaller. Faster. Since the number is 195 , it is

The “juq” prefix has floated around our internal naming system for experimental features. No one remembers who first typed it. Some say it stood for “Just Unusual Query.” Others swear it’s a keyboard smash that stuck. The 195 ? That’s the real clue. It’s not a version number. It’s a . Low metabolic rate—induced hibernation, maybe

where P is plaintext, K is the key, and C the ciphertext. Because the key is a single byte ( 0 ≤ K ≤ 255 ), the operation can be applied independently to each byte of the ciphertext.