The first version of Port80 stuffed an image file with packet data.
October 19th, 2005
The initial version of Port80 pushed packet information into a Targa TGA file.
It grabbed a specified number of bytes linearly from a specified position in each packet.
(for example, read 10 bytes out of every packet starting at pos = 1/3 of its byte length).
It then repeatedly read bytes until it had filled the image file of size w x h (in pixels).
Each byte was scaled by its unsigned value (0-255) to set the color of each pixel:
- R: (0-85)
- B: (86-170)
- G: (171-255)
Here are images as well as corresponding text files containing the origin of every packet and the specific byte data read.
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This is my wifi searching for a router, sending identical sounding packets over and over. You can see the repetition as a series of green horizontal lines.
1400×1050: 100 bytes/packet starting packet_length/5
file.PNG < –> file.txt source (4.27Mb)
Surfing online.
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100×100: 100 bytes/packet starting packet_length/20
file2.PNG < –> file2.txt source (36.6Kb)
Surfing online.
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100×100: 15 bytes/packet starting packet_length/25
file3.PNG < –> file3.txt source (177Kb)
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I decided to pursue a more visually active dissemination of the information … aka I thought the pictures were boring and took a different approach with Port80.
