That seemed strange to me too, why stop after the first 64 characters. Why not do the whole thing?
Just because you find some "highly compressed" "information" in the 8 x 8 grid, doesn't mean a grid 20,000 x 20,000(how many characters in the entire text?) wouldn't also contain similar things, hell you might find a picture of Santa Claus made from Yods or something.
Come on, get cracking! You've wasted years on one Pixel! You have to get the Big Picture. I'm sure there would be some software that could do it in seconds...
The Hebrew Torah is often presented (mostly by Jews) as a coherent divine revelation. And it seems to matter that it consists of exactly 304805 characters. As such, it can all be contained in a 553x553 square, with room to spare.
Despite the fact that I prefer to work on the 64-letter Genesis Seal, I do in fact have the whole Torah as a data file. And I have developed my own software that will present it all, or any part of it, as an
expanding spiral. This is the same as the G3 and G4 aspects of the Genesis Seal (which I have not yet presented to this forum), only bigger.
I doubt that I shall ever accomplish a detailed analysis of the whole Torah Square, but my software does allow me to make specific searches. I shall describe just one example.
The middle book of the Torah, known to Christians as Leviticus, is called
Vayiqra in Judaism. This 5-letter Hebrew word is the first to occur in that book; in other words it is an incipit, just as the Enuma Elish is named from
its opening text. Anyway, to the point... In the Hebrew language,
Vayiqra is a relatively long word, and it contains a letter (the
Qof) that is used less than most. So, I wondered if there would be even a single emergent occurrence of
Vayiqra in the 553x553 Torah Square. I was quite surprised to find that there is just a single occurrence, and that it has an interesting property. Bear in mind that an emergent word may be oriented in any of 7 alternative ways - I am excluding the direction of the original text in any given location. Or we can reduce the valid orientations to just four if we accept that each may flow in either direction (eg top-to-bottom or bottom-to-top). But the possibilities are huge if the precise starting point is taken into account. So I was amazed to find the single emergent occurrence of the name of the Torah's middle book sitting precisely within a diagonal of the square, a long way downstream of the square's origin, at the centre.
I have found a few, more elaborate constructs much closer to the origin, but nothing as densely packed as in the first 64 letters.