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by ceraes
4267 days ago
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jsaxton86's Test Result's:
Input File:
Title: The Simpsons Movie - 1080p Trailer.mp4
Kind: MPEG-4 movie
Size: 147,399,359 bytes (147.4 MB on disk)
Video Dimensions: 1920 x 800
Codecs: H.264, AAC
Duration: 02:17
Audio Channels: 6
Output Cram:
Title: The Simpsons Movie - 1080p Trailer.mp4.cram
Kind: Document
Size: 113,620,340 bytes (113.6 MB on disk)
Time to Cram File:
Seconds: 3313.306152 (55 Minutes ~13.3 Seconds)
Memory Usage:
GB (Rounded): 24.67 GB
Hardware Overview:
Model Name: iMac
Model Identifier: iMac11,1
Processor Name: Intel Core i7
Processor Speed: 2.8 GHz
Number of Processors: 1
Total Number of Cores: 4
L2 Cache (per Core): 256 KB
L3 Cache: 8 MB
Memory: 16 GB
Processor Interconnect Speed: 4.8 GT/s
Boot ROM Version: IM111.0034.B02
SMC Version (system): 1.54f36 We're really proud to try our best on your test jsaxton86, and we know that test results from the person showing you something always come with a healthy pinch of salt. So we'll ask the community to give it a try, and back us up here. Scientific testing means repeatable parameters, so we urge others to take his test too. (--EDIT: Turns out this file is too big 50MB in the limit of Github push-- We're also making our Cram file available on github, check it out with the decompressor or in a Hex editor: https://github.com/Cramcore/Crams) From these results you can clearly see areas we aren't happy with either. Time and memory, but this is just the beginning for us, we developed this system because 4 decades of research hadn't yielded these results. Then we sat down and threw out the book. With some notes on the research of Marcus Hutter (http://prize.hutter1.net/) and Matt Mahoney (http://mattmahoney.net/) plus the input of wonderful mentors and mathematical genius like Brad Feld (http://www.feld.com/) we started code for the Cram project over 3 years and research another 2 before that. We're very grateful for the opportunity we have now. We encourage everyone to try if for themselves, request the decompressor and try it too. But let humanity never believe that innovation is impossible. In 1966, the idea of a flip open communicator was science fiction, today we have not only communicators in our pockets, but whole computers. At Cramtec we hope our work can help move humanity to the next set of great technologies. |
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Not saying this is a bad thing in anyway. I believe you are right when you mention piracy. For a torrent swarm this format would be ideal in the same way that RAR was a decade or two ago.
I think the trend to a centralised streaming Internet is a bad one. A decentralised P2P one is much more in keeping with the initial ideals of the Internet. Download, decompress (for use) and share are a much more fitting if they respected copyright at the same time.
Best of luck.