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In 1977, Miller had split up with his girlfriend. A friend suggested that he read a book the friend himself had just finished. The book was Crash (1973) by J. G. Ballard.[1] He felt that Ballard's writing took him five minutes into the future; the novel was to be a major influence in the music he would produce as The Normal.[1]Miller was disillusioned by the fact you needed to learn three chords to be in a punk band, so he decided to purchase a synthesiser. His thinking was that you only needed to learn to press one key on a synthesiser.[1] After buying a Korg 700s synthesiser from Macari's music shop in London,[1] Miller recorded and released a single under the name The Normal. This was "T.V.O.D."/"Warm Leatherette".[2] Both tracks were minimalist electronic songs influenced by the Crash novel.[1] He wanted the sound of the recordings to be visual, like driving along a highway between large buildings then going through a tunnel.[1]The single was recorded in Daniel Miller's house[3] using a TEAC four track tape recorder and the Korg mini700s synthesiser.[citation needed]
Some algorithms and implementations commonly used today are zlib, lz4, and xz. Each of these algorithms offers different trade-offs: lz4 aims for speed, xz aims for higher compression ratios, and zlib aims for a good balance of speed and size. The table below indicates the rough trade-offs of the algorithms' default compression ratio and speed for the Silesia corpus by comparing the algorithms per lzbench, a pure in-memory benchmark meant to model raw algorithm performance. 2b1af7f3a8