Algorithm that makes maximum compression of completly diffused data.

rusi rustompmody at gmail.com
Thu Nov 7 21:36:51 EST 2013


On Friday, November 8, 2013 7:55:18 AM UTC+5:30, jonas wrote:
> Den fredagen den 8:e november 2013 kl. 03:17:36 UTC+1 skrev Chris Angelico:
> > On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 1:05 PM,  jonas.thornvall wrote:
> > > I guess what matter is how fast an algorithm can encode and decode a big number, at least if you want to use it for very big sets of random data, or losless video compression?

> > I don't care how fast. I care about the laws of physics :) You can't
> > stuff more data into less space without losing some of it.
> > Also, please lose Google Groups, or check out what other people have
> > said about making it less obnoxious.
> > ChrisA

> Please, you are he obnoxious, so fuck off or go learn about
> reformulation of problems. Every number has an infinite number of
> arithmetical solutions. So every number do has a shortest
> arithmetical encoding. And that is not the hard part to figure out,
> the hard part is to find a generic arithmetic encoding.

Since we are discussing profound matters such as cosmic laws,
here's my 'all-universal' law:

When you engage with a troll you get trolled.



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