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The articel is quite old (2001); it was not very well covered in the Belgian press (e.g. only Teletekst on national TV, not in the news broadcasts or in the papers). IIRC, compression was quite intense (couple of hours); decompression went in realtime (e.g. for playback of video)
The link to which is pointed doesn't seem to work now.
Strange thought that if the technology is *that* feasible, we still haven't heard more from it.
Jörg
pixar Dream as if you'll live forever. Live as if you'll die tomorrow. (James Dean)
Frankly, there are THEORETICAL compression schema that will allow you to put an entire dictionary into one longish prime number.
The problem is that decompression takes as long, if not longer, than compression. And we're talking DAYS here, and although you can store the compressed image on a floppy, you need an inconveniently large terabyte hard disk to store the working data for decompression.
As pointed out in some of the comments on this article, his claim that he uses "letters instead of just 1's and 0's" are bizarre, since computers... last I checked... still run on binary.
Gpar_
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The details of how exactly ZeoSync's technology works are murky. In its press release announcing the "breakthrough", the West Palm Beach, Florida-based company provided a complex explanation, saying that the technology "intentionally randomizes naturally occurring patterns to form entropy-like random sequences" and then "encodes these singular-bit-variance strings within complex combinatorial series to result in massively reduced ... equivalents."
Don't click on the Zeosync link ( ), the site is gone
Rakido
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Bah, I've designed a compression system that can compress an entire dictionary into a single bit! True, the compression software is a tad bloated, and only works well in very tightly defined applications (compressing/decompresing a specific dictionary for example .)
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