Duuh guys - it's so easy. Ever thought of simply compressing the compressed data AGAIN???
Do that the necessary amount of times and - tadaa - it's done. Chris 2009/4/1 Brent Davidson <[email protected]> > Cary Fitch wrote: > > It uses proprietary EDC. (Extreme Data Compression) The 140 bytes at 8 > bits each, and that is 2^140^8, a nearly inexhaustible key number which is > related to audio and video data simultaneously stored on a Google Database, > which is then sent to the user. > > Thus with the 140 byte message, full audio and video can be retrieved. > > This is an outgrowth of the data compression program circa about 1992, when > disks were much smaller than today. A very small compression program would > infinitely compress data on a disk to allow storage of more data. It was > only a 200 bytes or so in size (DOS days):-) and worked perfectly. Running > it once resulted in lots of storage space. It took very little time. Of > course rewriting the MBR (Master Boot Record) takes very little time. > > Recovering the "compressed" data was tough though. > > Cary Fitch > 04/01/09 > > > -----Original Message----- > From: [email protected] > [mailto:[email protected] > <[email protected]>] On Behalf Of Tzafrir Cohen > Sent: Wednesday, April 01, 2009 11:09 AM > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: [asterisk-users] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: NEW CHANNEL > DRIVERFORASTERISK RELEASED TODAY > > On Wed, Apr 01, 2009 at 06:52:55PM +0300, Dovid Bender wrote: > > > I wish we could have this for real.... > > > Micro-video-blogging: Limited to 140B ? > > > > > I thought maybe it used Infinite Monkey Compression where a mathematic > equation whose output over a specified domain would recreate the data-bits. > For those unfamiliar with Infinite Monkey Compression it was theorized by me > a few years ago as an offshoot of Infinite Monkey Theorem (monkeys, > typewriters Shakespeare, etc...). The original theory was that is an > infinite number of monkeys could eventually type the complete works of > Shakespeare through random coincidence then a random bit generator running > for an infinite amount of time would eventually produce the equivalent bit > sequence of any particular piece of software. Infinity being, well, rather > infinite and humans being mortal and all, infinite runs on a RBG didn't seem > like all that great of an option, so I kept thinking... Then I realized > that any file can be represented by a sequence of numbers. All you have to > do is find the equation that will output those number sequences and you've > got a highly-compressed way to recreate any file. Just send the equation > give it a start and end value and let the computer save the output as a > binary file. Unfortunately I was never able to take IMC beyond the purely > theoretical. > > > _______________________________________________ > -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- > > asterisk-users mailing list > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users >
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