Intel introduces new compression technology for surfers [CNN]
Forwarded message:
INTEL INTRODUCES TECHNOLOGY TO SURF THE WEB FASTER
January 19, 1998 Web posted at: 9:35 p.m. EST (0235 GMT)
HILLSBORO, Oregon (AP) -- The World Wide Wait may be over.
Computer chip giant Intel on Monday announced a way for Internet surfers to download images twice as fast over regular phone lines without any special equipment or software -- but it will add about $5 to monthly access fees.
The technology called Quick Web is installed on the computers called servers that Internet services use to store and relay data. The combination of Intel hardware and special software compresses all the graphic images that are piped through the server, boosting access speed.
"The more pictures on the screen, the faster it is," said Dave Preston, Internet marketing manager for Intel.
[text deleted] ____________________________________________________________________ | | | The most powerful passion in life is not love or hate, | | but the desire to edit somebody elses words. | | | | Sign in Ed Barsis' office | | | | _____ The Armadillo Group | | ,::////;::-. Austin, Tx. USA | | /:'///// ``::>/|/ http://www.ssz.com/ | | .', |||| `/( e\ | | -====~~mm-'`-```-mm --'- Jim Choate | | ravage@ssz.com | | 512-451-7087 | |____________________________________________________________________|
At 08:59 AM 1/20/98 -0600, Jim Choate wrote:
Forwarded message:
INTEL INTRODUCES TECHNOLOGY TO SURF THE WEB FASTER
January 19, 1998 Web posted at: 9:35 p.m. EST (0235 GMT)
HILLSBORO, Oregon (AP) -- The World Wide Wait may be over.
Computer chip giant Intel on Monday announced a way for Internet surfers to download images twice as fast over regular phone lines without any special equipment or software -- but it will add about $5 to monthly access fees.
The technology called Quick Web is installed on the computers called servers that Internet services use to store and relay data. The combination of Intel hardware and special software compresses all the graphic images that are piped through the server, boosting access speed.
"The more pictures on the screen, the faster it is," said Dave Preston, Internet marketing manager for Intel.
This sounds like a real interesting scam. Graphic files on servers are already compressed. Have they found some way to compress already compressed files? And if it does not require special software at the client end, then they must be decompressing it before sending the file. Or maybe they just convert all the images to low quality jpegs. This has "Idea from Marketing" written all over it. --- | "That'll make it hot for them!" - Guy Grand | |"The moral PGP Diffie taught Zimmermann unites all| Disclaimer: | | mankind free in one-key-steganography-privacy!" | Ignore the man | |`finger -l alano@teleport.com` for PGP 2.6.2 key | behind the keyboard.| | http://www.ctrl-alt-del.com/~alan/ |alan@ctrl-alt-del.com|
At 03:46 PM 1/21/98 -0800, Steve Schear wrote:
Maybe they dynamically turn off the modem compression feature at both ends during an image download. LZW-like compression actually adds overhead to files which are non-text based.
How do they do that from the server side? --- | "That'll make it hot for them!" - Guy Grand | |"The moral PGP Diffie taught Zimmermann unites all| Disclaimer: | | mankind free in one-key-steganography-privacy!" | Ignore the man | |`finger -l alano@teleport.com` for PGP 2.6.2 key | behind the keyboard.| | http://www.ctrl-alt-del.com/~alan/ |alan@ctrl-alt-del.com|
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- In <3.0.5.32.19980121220518.03c31580@clueserver.org>, on 01/21/98 at 10:05 PM, Alan Olsen <alan@clueserver.org> said:
Maybe they dynamically turn off the modem compression feature at both ends during an image download. LZW-like compression actually adds overhead to files which are non-text based.
How do they do that from the server side?
If someone can fuck with my modem settings over the "net" I will be placing a call to Boeing (formaly USR) first thing to see what they are going to do to fix it. - -- - --------------------------------------------------------------- William H. Geiger III http://users.invweb.net/~whgiii Geiger Consulting Cooking With Warp 4.0 Author of E-Secure - PGP Front End for MR/2 Ice PGP & MR/2 the only way for secure e-mail. OS/2 PGP 2.6.3a at: http://users.invweb.net/~whgiii/pgpmr2.html - --------------------------------------------------------------- Tag-O-Matic: This marks Logical End-Of-Message. Physical EOM follows -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.3a-sha1 Charset: cp850 Comment: Registered_User_E-Secure_v1.1b1_ES000000 iQCVAwUBNMbZnY9Co1n+aLhhAQH7EQP/c1j6peXFu2Tf2Dk7gkA3NUtS7dkXMgAL ddUQ9OIp1t3vfuo1ywaX/cB7IuIc8HaJU1FbKCHMLtJaM5e5me/wNuAtD7cIJm9Y umsMEwhRnbcAH0TUZFJMJwEmbDk2QArrdMK1e4gXc82+XCQA96nNwYhXvg/4N9NA wtL7+DqwyU8= =5c26 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
On Wed, 21 Jan 1998, Alan Olsen wrote:
This sounds like a real interesting scam. Graphic files on servers are already compressed. Have they found some way to compress already compressed files? And if it does not require special software at the client end, then they must be decompressing it before sending the file.
Or maybe they just convert all the images to low quality jpegs.
This has "Idea from Marketing" written all over it.
From the sounds of it, it's a glorified caching scheme.
=====================================Kaos=Keraunos=Kybernetos============== .+.^.+.| Ray Arachelian |Prying open my 3rd eye. So good to see |./|\. ..\|/..|sunder@sundernet.com|you once again. I thought you were |/\|/\ <--*-->| ------------------ |hiding, and you thought that I had run |\/|\/ ../|\..| "A toast to Odin, |away chasing the tail of dogma. I opened|.\|/. .+.v.+.|God of screwdrivers"|my eye and there we were.... |..... ======================= http://www.sundernet.com ==========================
At 08:59 AM 1/20/98 -0600, Jim Choate wrote:
Forwarded message:
INTEL INTRODUCES TECHNOLOGY TO SURF THE WEB FASTER
January 19, 1998 Web posted at: 9:35 p.m. EST (0235 GMT)
HILLSBORO, Oregon (AP) -- The World Wide Wait may be over.
Computer chip giant Intel on Monday announced a way for Internet surfers to download images twice as fast over regular phone lines without any special equipment or software -- but it will add about $5 to monthly access fees.
The technology called Quick Web is installed on the computers called servers that Internet services use to store and relay data. The combination of Intel hardware and special software compresses all the graphic images that are piped through the server, boosting access speed.
"The more pictures on the screen, the faster it is," said Dave Preston, Internet marketing manager for Intel.
This sounds like a real interesting scam. Graphic files on servers are already compressed. Have they found some way to compress already compressed files? And if it does not require special software at the client end, then they must be decompressing it before sending the file.
Or maybe they just convert all the images to low quality jpegs.
This has "Idea from Marketing" written all over it.
Maybe they dynamically turn off the modem compression feature at both ends during an image download. LZW-like compression actually adds overhead to files which are non-text based. --Steve
Maybe they dynamically turn off the modem compression feature at both ends during an image download. LZW-like compression actually adds overhead to files which are non-text based.
But any modern modem has v.42bis, and with v.42bis it automatically shuts off the compression anyway! (Maybe that was just v.42, I forget, but it doesn't have the problems that MNP5 has with compressed files) Either way, this feature already exists.... Ryan Anderson - Alpha Geek PGP fp: 7E 8E C6 54 96 AC D9 57 E4 F8 AE 9C 10 7E 78 C9 print pack"C*",split/\D+/,`echo "16iII*o\U@{$/=$z;[(pop,pop,unpack"H*",<> )]}\EsMsKsN0[lN*1lK[d2%Sa2/d0<X+d*lMLa^*lN%0]dsXx++lMlN/dsM0<J]dsJxp"|dc`
At 3:31 PM -0500 1/22/98, Ryan Anderson wrote:
Maybe they dynamically turn off the modem compression feature at both ends during an image download. LZW-like compression actually adds overhead to files which are non-text based.
But any modern modem has v.42bis, and with v.42bis it automatically shuts off the compression anyway! (Maybe that was just v.42, I forget, but it doesn't have the problems that MNP5 has with compressed files)
Either way, this feature already exists....
Thanks for straightening this out. I was thinking of MNP5 and couldn't find my modem's referemce manual to consider v.42/bis. --Steve
participants (6)
-
Alan Olsen
-
Jim Choate
-
Ray Arachelian
-
Ryan Anderson
-
Steve Schear
-
William H. Geiger III