Re: a Christmas day compressor



WAIT!!

I have not finished writing this.

I must have struck a wrong key -- sorry, but I am not finished!

Awk!!

I have more to write up!

Awk!!

And someone should fix this defect in Google's client interface.


On Dec 25, 11:22 am, jg <jules.sto...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I am giving this away in the spirit of Christmas, and I realize that I
haven't been forgiving and friendly.  Anyone who frequents these
'pages' knows this and a whole lot more.  Still, I am supposed to be
Christ-like, that's the point of Christmas to celebrate the birthday
of the man who came into this world to die so that you and I wouldn't
have to.  To obtain his forgiveness we have to ask Jesus to partner
with us and to live like we mean it -- because Jesus was not only a
man, he was/is also the Messiah promised by the God of the Bible.

This design is a gift in every sense, I promise never to attempt to
patent this design and I ask others, even people in other countries to
cooperate.

Okay, here goes...

Normally we think of errors as something introduced by the channel,
something that we (sometimes) attempt to correct because somewhere
along the way noise was introduced, at least in part, reducing the
integrity of the signal.  Well, this doesn't have to be the only model
of errors.  In my toy compressor corrections are necessary because the
design of the system simply doesn't send the complete signal.

This design is based on the principle that information sent in packets
does not have to be detected (ie., understood) the same way and in the
presence of errors can be corrected -- assuming the design allows for
such corrections.  Properly constructed, a defective packet can be
corrected by relying on the surrounding context.

Get these point -- a list of received packets always contains some
error-packets because sending the correct value for that packet would
reduce compressibility.  (Yes, this model assumes data that is not

.



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