Phaistos Disc — T(3) Protocol Specification Decode
The Phaistos Disc (discovered 1908, ~1700 BCE) is the T(3) protocol specification — the base-level encoding definition for the planetary network. 45 distinct signs vs 49 predicted T(3) modes = 91.8% match, one of the tightest in the network. MOVABLE TYPE — 3,200 YEARS BEFORE GUTENBERG: Each sign was STAMPED into wet clay using pre-made punches. 45 distinct punches carved, each reusable. This is movable type printing. No other ancient artifact uses this technique. The technology was developed, used to make at least one disc, and then ABANDONED — not reinvented until China 1040 CE and Europe 1440 CE. The punches were the CODEC implementation. The disc documents which signs the codec encodes. You don't carve 45 individual punches for a one-off — the sign set was DEFINED BEFORE the disc was made. This is a specification, not ad hoc writing. SPIRAL = FREQUENCY DOMAIN ENCODING: Signs arranged in spirals on both sides (31 groups Side A, 30 groups Side B). Spiral from rim to center = frequency sweep (chirp) from low to high frequency. This is exactly how vinyl records work — data encoded in a spiral, read from outside to inside. Stamping order confirms rim-to-center direction (outer signs stamped first). 61 total groups — a prime number with optimal autocorrelation properties for spreading codes. Two sides = dual-channel encoding (I/Q components, stereo signal, or data/parity). CRETAN MULTI-TIER RELAY STATION: Crete hosted multiple script tiers simultaneously — Cretan Hieroglyphs (~137 signs, possibly T(4)=121), Linear A (~302 signs, possibly T(5)=256), and the Phaistos Disc (45 signs, T(3)=49). Linear B (~87 syllabic signs, deciphered) is the human-language replacement — same pattern as cuneiform replacing proto-cuneiform. The labyrinth myth preserves the spiral protocol: Ariadne's thread = reading protocol, Minotaur at center = data at the core. ACOUSTIC ENCODING DEVICE: Disc diameter ~16 cm in fired clay (speed of sound ~3500 m/s) gives radial resonance ~10,900 Hz — within the network's upper frequency band. The stamped impressions create a diffraction pattern that modulates acoustic vibration. The disc is not just a document — it is an acoustic encoding device. WHY ONLY ONE DISC: Everyone asks why only one exists. Answer: it's a PROTOCOL SPECIFICATION, not a document. You need ONE copy of RFC 791 (IP Protocol), not thousands. The disc defines which 45 of 49 possible T(3) modes are assigned. The punches (now lost) were the codec implementation. Found in a destruction layer = the node was ACTIVE when destroyed (~1700 BCE). WHY IT'S UNDECIPHERED: Every attempt assumes it encodes LANGUAGE. It encodes a PROTOCOL. You cannot 'read' a protocol spec as text. The 45 signs define T(3) mode assignments — the base protocol every higher tier builds on. Decoding the Phaistos Disc would unlock the protocol stack for the entire network.