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New and revolutionary data comression scheme!

Name: Anonymous 2009-06-13 17:17

Infinite compression?

I've always was interested in how compressed files worked and why the compression factor is so low.
The entropy explanation isn't something i would accept without tinkering with the data. The idea of my compression algorithm(currently under development) is to
use algebraic properties of files to express the data in more concise way.
The thing might sound trivial, but its implementation is not.
Normal compression works by splitting FILE and finding redundant pieces to express them in minimum volume.
Imagine a FILE read and converted to arbitrary precision integer. Now consider all the myriad ways to generate said integer. Sounds difficult? Not so much.
1.lets take a Prime Number,e.g. 2 and raise it to power closest to our integer, e.g. 20000. Note the difference from the (FILE-result).
2.Get the smallest difference with the powers available,
and proceed to next step:
3.If the difference is negative: find 2 raised to the power
of X which would close the gap,by substracting it from #1
If the difference is positive just add 2 with closest power to the difference .
The end result could be something like
2^6+2^5-2^3+2^1-2^0=Integer=FILE
Its can be improved further by using other prime numbers powers with the idea of expression taking the least space.
The same thing can be accomplished with arbitrary length floating point numbers like 2^123712.1282 which would converge faster,but will require some fixing to convert to a stable binary result.
Posted by FrozenVoid at 15:37

Name: Anonymous 2009-06-19 5:03

>>150
Probably FV posting as Anonymous, but here it goes:

Hash: A mathematical one-way, irreversable algorithm generating a string with fixed-length from another string of any length. ...

A hash is lossy by definition, it takes a (possibly large) data set and applies some lossy/irreversable algorithm to it which converts it into a fixed sized value. That's the definition of a hash. If you could make them reversable, it wouldn't be a hash, and most likely you would need a size as big as the input, thus making it useless for compression purposes.

Real lossless compression algorithms can't compress(by much, or it could even need more space than the input) already compressed/random data any more.

Lossy compression algorithms for media(video/audio) work by discarding data which might not be noticeable by everyone's sensory organs.

IHBT

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