Can someone explain what the fuck is happening here?
How is this possible?
Can someone explain what the fuck is happening here?
How is this possible?
compression
magic
you haven't finished the download, fucktard
>absolute state of wincucks in 2019 - 2.5 days
Why are you assuming that?
Its on a 1.5TB external hooked up to a TPLink Router.
Same drive, different folder
>wincucks
Spysoft Adblows 10 cucks =/= Windows 8.1 sUsers
I cant find any mention of compression settings on the router, or the drive
lol, cope
your windows 8 also spies on you
7 was the last decent version of windows, just install gnu/linux now. or can babby not handle it?
>7 was the last decent version of windows, just install gnu/linux now. or can babby not handle it?
I have both.
why are you butting into our conversation? why are you using reddit spacing?
why haven't you gone back yet?
Why would a router have compression settings you absolute mongoloid
because it has NAS abilities?
>expecting intelligence from wincucks
you do realise all of their programs need to have pretty pictures on which they click to do things?
fuck all that noise, there's a copy of real Star Wars that's in 4k? sheeit nigga my plex dick is already hard
Yes but like. Why...
Data information is displayed in bytes, the smallest unit that can be read by software, but to be stored into the HDD must be converted into bits
then we know that 1 byte equals 8 bites
uppercase B in GB is byte, lower case b is bit
therefore 84GB / 8 = 10.5Gb
so the file is saved as 10.5 GigaBits on the HDD, but that's how it's stored, it's "size on disk" is different, it's shown on GigaBytes so we need to convert again
10.5Gb / 8 = 1.3125GB of size on disk
on top, since we converted twice to store on disk, the file must be stored twice, to be able to convert the copy without losing the original when reading the file so it's 1.3125 x 2 = 2.625GB of size on disk
The remaining 1.2GB~ is ususally file headers, cache and empty space between the file parts on the disk, since the HDD disk memory is linear, you often end up with empty gaps between files, that's why defragmenting clears this empty space, on SSD disks since memory can be accesed non-linearly, it doesn't suffer from this
You want the Harmy Despecialized Edition regardless.
It's not compression, idiot. It's already compressed.
The download just isn't finished.
linux is hot garbage
i need gpu acceleration
Look OP, the archive button is checked
The 4K is a TC scan.
Same file on my D drive.
lol, fuck me. i see it all now.
thanks user
Likely Samba or whatever protocol you're using isn't reporting the size properly. Plug the drive in locally and see if it still reports as 3.84 GB.
Yes, but you still want the 720p Harmy Despecialized Edition.
looks like some of the original files had that check box "ready for archiving" checked and when you copy the file to another drive it archives it?
Now how the hell does it manage to compress it that much? I would expect to run into some issues playing that video file as it gets decompressed, but all my media devices are able to stream without any frame loss on either version of the file.
Is this a win10 feature?
Why? Even the guy himself prefers 4k77. You have a legit 4k scan vs a cobbled together 1080p Blu-ray and lesser source.
winshit
No, there's no way it compresses that much. See
Harmy
Yikes, that blown out white hair in the 4K...
>Plug the drive in locally and see if it still reports as 3.84 GB.
its attached with VHB tape to my router. I cant plug it anywhere else.
The entire folder is seen as 601GB/255GB while used space is reporting as 605GB. Must be how it reports it then.
Its a TC scan. Its not color corrected. Its how it was shown in theaters.
How helpful
And it's not very good due to it.
You don't have a laptop or OTG cable for phone? Anyway that's probably it. I remember I had to change SMB settings for FreeNAS to get it to report properly. Not sure if you can do the same for your router.
Looks better than Harmys 720p on my 65" 4K.
Dont get me wrong, I love the work he, and others have put into it. Im also glad someone was able to track down lightly used projection film, and scan it.
>Star Wars
Came here to post this
I wish compressing video files at a 20:1 ratio with no quality loss was a thing but yeah it isn't.
Sometimes I forget how retarded Jow Forums is
came here to post this:
WWWWWWWWWWWRRRRRRRRRRRRRRROOOOOOOOOOOOOONNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
came here to post this:
BBRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAP
this
this