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Had an idea - looking for a math buff to tell me if it's possible with today's technology.



The concept is called fractals where you can compress the image and send the
values and recreate the image. There was a body of work on the subject, I
would say in the mid to late eighties where two Georgia Tech professors
started a company doing it.

John (ISDN) Lee

On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 4:07 PM, Landon Stewart <lstewart at superb.net> wrote:

> Lets say you had a file that was 1,000,000,000 characters consisting of
> 8,000,000,000bits.  What if instead of transferring that file through the
> interwebs you transmitted a mathematical equation to tell a computer on the
> other end how to *construct* that file.  First you'd feed the file into a
> cruncher of some type to reduce the pattern of 8,000,000,000 bits into an
> equation somehow.  Sure this would take time, I realize that.  The equation
> would then be transmitted to the other computer where it would use its
> mad-math-skillz to *figure out the answer* which would theoretically be the
> same pattern of bits.  Thus the same file would emerge on the other end.
>
> The real question here is how long would it take for a regular computer to
> do this kind of math?
>
> Just a weird idea I had.  If it's a good idea then please consider this
> intellectual property.  LOL
>
>
> --
> Landon Stewart <LStewart at SUPERB.NET>
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