Inlay bates in Radix-64

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Aug 6th, 2022
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How to inlay bates in Radix-64

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so good oh thank you for coming back now weamp;#39;re going to have a satoshi who was here in vienna of the group of bhutan just before covet and because of kobe he came to japan to start a master with miyamoto thatamp;#39;s more less when i started here so now we are finally meeting in real life and heamp;#39;s going to talk about the probabilistic exact construction of decoders from encoding black boxes yeah thank you for a nice introduction and thank you for inviting me to this yeah vienna and it is very nice opportunity to have a this kind of in-person talk and actually it is my first experience to talk in in person so it is very nice so yeah thank you for that yeah today um iamp;#39;m i will present with this title probabilistic exact construction decoders from encoding black boxes and this talk is basically based on this archive paper which is our recent work and this is basically okay and to begin sorry okay not yes if you want you can do left right here and use the point ah

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The more typical use is to encode binary data (such as an image); the resulting Base64 data will only contain 64 different ASCII characters, all of which can reliably be transferred across systems that may corrupt the raw source bytes.
What is Radix 64 Encoding? Radix 64 encoding allows binary data stored in octets (i.e. bytes) to be expressed as printable characters.
Base64 is a scheme for converting binary data to printable ASCII characters, namely the upper- and lower-case Roman alphabet characters (AZ, az), the numerals (09), and the + and / symbols, with the = symbol as a special suffix code. The datas original length must be a multiple of eight bits.
One common approach is to first convert the integer array into a binary string, and then encode the binary string into radix 64.
Since Base64 uses 24-bit sequences, padding is needed when the original binary cannot be divided into a 24-bit sequence. You have probably seen this type of padding before represented by printed equal signs (=).
This error happens when the string that you are trying to transform contains a character not recognized by the basic Base 64 Alphabet (in this case it was an underscore character).
Assuming the error uses hexadecimal numbers, then character 22 is , which means it attempted to decode something enclosed in double quotes as base64, while a double quote is not a valid base64 character.
The Base64 characters include: Numbers: 0123456789 Symbols: +/ Uppercase letters: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ Lowercase letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz Padding character: =

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