On Mon, 2 May 2005 23:11:54 +0530, rumours say that km
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> might have written:
>Hi all,
>
>This was posted long ago.
>I tried to compress a mp3 file but i couldnt get the keycode+".out" file
>which is of size 1 bit. instead it is printed to STDOUT. i am usng python 2.4
>. i unde
Hi all,
This was posted long ago.
I tried to compress a mp3 file but i couldnt get the keycode+".out" file which
is of size 1 bit. instead it is printed to STDOUT. i am usng python 2.4 . i
understand that the keycode is embedded in the filename itself. Is it a problem
with python not able to c
R. C. James Harlow wrote:
On Thursday 14 April 2005 10:27, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Supercomputer and encryption and compression @ rate of 96%
Dear Sir or Madam,
I have received notification that you posted a compression algorithm on
the newsgroup comp.lang.python on or about 10:27:26 on
On Thursday 14 April 2005 10:27, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Supercomputer and encryption and compression @ rate of 96%
Dear Sir or Madam,
I have received notification that you posted a compression algorithm on
the newsgroup comp.lang.python on or about 10:27:26 on the 04/14/2005. I
R. C. James Harlow wrote:
On Thursday 14 April 2005 22:21, R. C. James Harlow wrote:
You have to do that before Fredrick's script works...
Damn - 'Fredrik's' - I accidentally decompressed his name.
It actually *is* "Fredrick", but the c is both silent,
and hidden...
-seemed-silly-enough-for-this-t
That's pretty good, but I have an algorithm that compresses data into
zero bits.
def compress(data):
pass
To decompress, you simply generate a random string of random length
using a random number generator based on quantum states, with the
expectation that you happen to be in one of the possibl
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
Tiziano Bettio wrote:
could someone please tell me that this thread wasn't a aprilsfoll day
joke and it is for real...
i'm pretty much able to go down to a single bit but what would be the
reverse algorithm as stated by martin...
magic?
I suggest running my script on a couple
On Thursday 14 April 2005 22:21, R. C. James Harlow wrote:
> You have to do that before Fredrick's script works...
Damn - 'Fredrik's' - I accidentally decompressed his name.
pgpbUXNRRyNvA.pgp
Description: PGP signature
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Tiziano Bettio wrote:
> Actually your script doesn't work on my python distribution...
>
> (using 2.3.2)
since then, 2.3.3, 2.3.4, 2.3.5, 2.4, and 2.4.1 has been released. since
the code uses generator expressions, you need at least 2.4.
(or you can add [] around the generator expressions, to t
Christos "TZOTZIOY" Georgiou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said :
> Well, I take advantage of this "folding" idea for years now. Do you
> remember DoubleSpace? I was getting to the limits [1] of my 100 MiB
> hard disk, so I was considering upgrading my hardware. A female
> friend of mine, knowing a littl
R. C. James Harlow wrote:
On Thursday 14 April 2005 22:18, Tiziano Bettio wrote:
Actually your script doesn't work on my python distribution...
Works fine here - did you decompress the first bit of the python executable?
You have to do that before Fredrick's script works...
well i tried
On Thursday 14 April 2005 22:18, Tiziano Bettio wrote:
> Actually your script doesn't work on my python distribution...
Works fine here - did you decompress the first bit of the python executable?
You have to do that before Fredrick's script works...
pgpYFHzjRTUoB.pgp
Description: PGP signatur
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
Tiziano Bettio wrote:
could someone please tell me that this thread wasn't a aprilsfoll day
joke and it is for real...
i'm pretty much able to go down to a single bit but what would be the
reverse algorithm as stated by martin...
magic?
I suggest running my script on a
Tiziano Bettio wrote:
> could someone please tell me that this thread wasn't a aprilsfoll day
> joke and it is for real...
>
> i'm pretty much able to go down to a single bit but what would be the
> reverse algorithm as stated by martin...
magic?
I suggest running my script on a couple of small
On Thu, 14 Apr 2005 17:44:56 +0200, Fredrik Lundh wrote:
> Will McGugan wrote:
>
>> Muchas gracias. Although there may be a bug. I compressed my Evanescence
>> albumn, but after decompression it became the complete works of Charles
>
> strange. the algorithm should be reversible. sounds like a
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And how do you get the data back ?
1+0=0 == 0+0=0
0+1=1 == 1+1=1
let's say you have the end key : 0
then you want to decompress it , but in what ? 0 0 or 1 0
;)
hi there
could someone please tell me that this thread wasn't a aprilsfoll day
joke and it is for real...
i'm
Will McGugan wrote:
> Muchas gracias. Although there may be a bug. I compressed my Evanescence
> albumn, but after decompression it became the complete works of Charles
strange. the algorithm should be reversible. sounds like an operating
system bug. what system are you using?
--
http://
On Thu, 14 Apr 2005 16:35:59 +0200, rumours say that "Fredrik Lundh"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> might have written:
>> [0] -- btw, in your code, Fredrik:
>> """file = open(keycode + ".out", "wb")""".replace("keycode", "filename")
>
>if you do that, decompression won't work.
How obvious, now that you men
Fredrik Lundh wrote:
Will McGugan wrote:
Please implement this as a Python module. I would like to compress my mp3 collection to single
bits.
here's the magic algorithm (somewhat simplified):
def algorithm(data):
m = 102021 # magic constant
d = [int(c) for c in str(1*2*3*4*5*m+5+4+2+1)]
And how do you get the data back ?
1+0=0 == 0+0=0
0+1=1 == 1+1=1
let's say you have the end key : 0
then you want to decompress it , but in what ? 0 0 or 1 0
;)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
> [0] -- btw, in your code, Fredrik:
> """file = open(keycode + ".out", "wb")""".replace("keycode", "filename")
if you do that, decompression won't work.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Thu, 14 Apr 2005 13:49:22 +0200, rumours say that "Fredrik Lundh"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> might have written:
>Will McGugan wrote:
>
>> Please implement this as a Python module. I would like to compress my mp3
>> collection to single
>> bits.
>
>here's the magic algorithm (somewhat simplified):
On 14 Apr 2005 02:27:26 -0700, rumours say that [EMAIL PROTECTED]
might have written:
>Supercomputer and encryption and compression @ rate of 96%
[snip]
In other words, the story of your life can be expressed as a single
binary zero. Get one.
--
TZOTZIOY, I speak England very best.
"B
Will McGugan wrote:
> Please implement this as a Python module. I would like to compress my mp3
> collection to single
> bits.
here's the magic algorithm (somewhat simplified):
def algorithm(data):
m = 102021 # magic constant
d = [int(c) for c in str(1*2*3*4*5*m+5+4+2+1)]
x = [ord(
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Will McGugan
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
Please implement this as a Python module. I would like to compress my
mp3 collection to single bits.
Just think you could have better than broadband download speeds, on your
old 300bps modem!
--
Stephen Kellett
Object Media
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Supercomputer and encryption and compression @ rate of 96%
The bit sent would be 0 and the key code would be F1-24,k 1-24,
I 1-24,K 1-24,j24,j1,j12,j1,j6,j1,j3,j1,j2,j1 and would unzip or be new
encryption you could encrypt or compress 100 terabits down to 1 bit of
Supercomputer and encryption and compression @ rate of 96%
Take a document then or a 3D matrix document change it two random or
binary code or just a program for 0's and 1's and fold it over and over
like a piece of paper then having the 1 and 0 add each other or the
0,1's cance
27 matches
Mail list logo