1998-01-21 - Re: Intel introduces new compression technology for surfers [CNN]

Header Data

From: Steve Schear <schear@lvdi.net>
To: Alan Olsen <alan@clueserver.org>
Message Hash: c98cde2548354a16a0c13ee1159604621693b95da953533ef5ba4db7170dfac9
Message ID: <v03102807b0ec38d520be@[208.129.55.202]>
Reply To: <199801201459.IAA26531@einstein.ssz.com>
UTC Datetime: 1998-01-21 23:50:05 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 07:50:05 +0800

Raw message

From: Steve Schear <schear@lvdi.net>
Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 07:50:05 +0800
To: Alan Olsen <alan@clueserver.org>
Subject: Re: Intel introduces new compression technology for surfers  [CNN]
In-Reply-To: <199801201459.IAA26531@einstein.ssz.com>
Message-ID: <v03102807b0ec38d520be@[208.129.55.202]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



>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







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