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ZeoSync

πŸ”—clumma <carl@...>

1/9/2002 3:20:23 PM

It's interesting that whoever wrote this had enough money to afford
as fancy a web site as I pulled it from: www.zeosync.com.

>>

The Pigeonhole Principle and Data Encoding

Dr. Claude Shannon's dissertation on Information Theory in 1948 and
his following work on run-length encoding confidently established the
understanding that compression technologies are "all" predisposed to
limitation. With this foundation behind us we can conclude that the
effort to accelerate the transmission of information past the
permutation load capacity of the binary system, and past the naturally
occurring singular-bit-variances of nature can not be accomplished
through compression. Rather, this problem can only be successfully
resolved through the solution of what is commonly understood within
the mathematical community as the "Pigeonhole Principle."

Given a number of pigeons within a sealed room that has a single hole,
and which allows only one pigeon at a time to escape the room, how
many unique markers are required to individually mark all of the
pigeons as each escapes, one pigeon at a time?

After some time a person will reasonably conclude that:

"One unique marker is required for each pigeon that flies through the
hole, if there are one hundred pigeons in the group then the answer is
one hundred markers".

In our three dimensional world we can visualize an example. If we were
to take a three-dimensional cube and collapse it into a two-
dimensional edge, and then again reduce it into a one-dimensional
point, and believe that we are going to successfully recover either
the square or cube from the single edge, we would be sorely mistaken.

This three-dimensional world limitation can however be resolved in
higher dimensional space. In higher, multi-dimensional projective
theory, it is possible to create string nodes that describe
significant omponents of simultaneously identically yet different
mathematical ntities. Within this space it is possible and is not a
theoretical mpossibility to create a point that is simultaneously a
square and also a cube. In our example all three substantially exist
as unique entities yet are linked together. This simultaneous yet
differentiated occurrence is the foundation of ZeoSync's Relational
Differentiation EncodingΒ™ (RDEΒ™) technology. This proprietary
methodology is capable of intentionally introducing a multi-
dimensional patterning so that the nodes of a target binary string
simultaneously and/or substantially occupy the space of a Low
Kolmogorov Complexity construct. The difference between these
occurrences is so small that we will have for all intents and
purposes successfully encoded lossley universal compression. The
limitation to this Pigeonhole Principle circumvention is that the
multi-dimensional space can never be super saturated, and that all
of the pigeons can not be simultaneously present at which point our
multi-dimensional circumvention of the pigeonhole problem breaks
down.

<<

-Carl

πŸ”—jonszanto <JSZANTO@...>

1/10/2002 9:00:14 AM

Carl,

--- In metatuning@y..., "clumma" <carl@l...> wrote:
> It's interesting that whoever wrote this had enough money to afford
> as fancy a web site as I pulled it from: www.zeosync.com.

"Flash Kiddies" are a dime a dozen these days. It wouldn't take too
much dough to hire someone for the basic interface they've got. One
of the truly democratizing aspects (for good and bad) of the web is
the patina of legitimacy that virtually anyone can effect.

Cheers,
Jon

πŸ”—monz <joemonz@...>

1/10/2002 9:14:41 AM

> From: jonszanto <JSZANTO@...>
> To: <metatuning@yahoogroups.com>
> Sent: Thursday, January 10, 2002 9:00 AM
> Subject: [metatuning] Re: ZeoSync
>
>
> Carl,
>
> --- In metatuning@y..., "clumma" <carl@l...> wrote:
> > It's interesting that whoever wrote this had enough money to afford
> > as fancy a web site as I pulled it from: www.zeosync.com.
>
> "Flash Kiddies" are a dime a dozen these days. It wouldn't take too
> much dough to hire someone for the basic interface they've got. One
> of the truly democratizing aspects (for good and bad) of the web is
> the patina of legitimacy that virtually anyone can effect.

Hmmm ... you could just as well have written "affect". :)

-monz

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πŸ”—peteysan@...

1/10/2002 10:27:31 AM

In a message dated 1/10/02 9:05:00 AM Pacific Standard Time, JSZANTO@...
writes:

> the {patina of legitimacy} that virtually anyone can effect.
>

Good one, Jon! I can use that!

Your Health, Lad

Pete

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

πŸ”—clumma <carl@...>

1/10/2002 10:56:28 AM

> "Flash Kiddies" are a dime a dozen these days. It wouldn't take
> too much dough to hire someone for the basic interface they've
> got.

Whatever it is, it's interesting they have that much.

> One of the truly democratizing aspects (for good and bad) of the
> web is the patina of legitimacy that virtually anyone can effect.

True enough.

-Carl

πŸ”—jonszanto <JSZANTO@...>

1/10/2002 1:16:32 PM

--- In metatuning@y..., "clumma" <carl@l...> wrote:
> > "Flash Kiddies" are a dime a dozen these days. It wouldn't take
> > too much dough to hire someone for the basic interface they've
> > got.
>
> Whatever it is, it's interesting they have that much.

Yep. Who knows? - maybe it's some company founded by someone who
inherited a fortune? :)