• uuencoding is a form of binary-to-text encoding that originated in the Unix programs uuencode and uudecode written by Mary Ann Horton at the University...
    16 KB (1,499 words) - 21:47, 12 May 2024
  • Network Unix-to-Unix, as in uuencode, a data transport encoding .uu, a compressed archive file extension, associated with uuencode Ulster University in Northern...
    2 KB (293 words) - 20:25, 11 January 2024
  • accomplished in 1980 by manually encoding 8-bit files using Mary Ann Horton's uuencode, and later using BinHex or xxencode and pasting the resulting text into...
    9 KB (1,036 words) - 06:25, 11 September 2024
  • hexadecimal encoding, subsequent versions of BinHex are more similar to uuencode, but combined both "forks" of the Mac file system together along with extended...
    10 KB (1,430 words) - 21:06, 29 August 2024
  • little as 1–2%, compared to 33–40% overhead for 6-bit encoding methods like uuencode and Base64. yEnc was initially developed by Jürgen Helbing, and its first...
    10 KB (1,110 words) - 12:09, 10 February 2024
  • dial-up communication between systems running the same OS – for example, uuencode for UNIX and BinHex for the TRS-80 (later adapted for the Macintosh) –...
    39 KB (3,772 words) - 05:57, 25 September 2024
  • xxencode is a binary-to-text encoding similar to uuencode which uses only the alphanumeric characters, and the plus and minus signs. It was invented as...
    3 KB (372 words) - 22:25, 21 October 2023
  • and decode the messages back into a binary file (usually using yEnc or Uuencode). The following is an example of an NZB 1.1 file. <?xml version="1.0"...
    6 KB (468 words) - 06:14, 16 June 2024
  • and in specifying shar smartness. For example, shar may compress files, uuencode binary files, split long files and construct multi-part mailings, ensure...
    1 KB (174 words) - 06:25, 11 September 2024
  • original, assuming eight bits per ASCII character), it is more efficient than uuencode or Base64, which use four characters to represent three bytes of data (1⁄3...
    22 KB (1,504 words) - 00:21, 4 July 2024