one taken from hoke's computer at home, one from hoke's computer at work. now, you know that experts can distinguish one person's typing from another by their rhythm. yeah, you mean like morse code. right. telegraph operators used to recognize each other by the different ways they used to tap into the exact same codes, like a concert pianist sitting down to play a piece of music. even though the notes originate from the sheet music, the way she plays them is entirely distinctive. now, if another pianist sits down to play the same piece of music, the strength of notes, the flourishes in rhythm would make the keystrokes totally different. now, only by seeing them side-by-side would you be able to tell they were different. see... now, i'm sitting here, and i'm looking at these, and they look identical to me. that's because they are, don. this is from hoke's computer at home. the keystrokes you're seeing are passwords used to tap into hoke's sabermetrics files, made after hoke was dead. this is from hoke's computer workstation at the lorman group, made after ho