It's been a LOOOONNNNGGGG time since I worked with this kind of stuff, so if 
this is a silly idea, just say "Nope...these aren't the droids you're looking 
for". :-)

Could you treat the file as a tape, and make use of READT?

Drew thinkingoutsidetheboxbeforelunchisabadidea Henderson ;-)

-----Original Message-----
From: u2-users-boun...@listserver.u2ug.org 
[mailto:u2-users-boun...@listserver.u2ug.org] On Behalf Of fft2...@aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, November 10, 2010 9:01 AM
To: u2-users@listserver.u2ug.org
Subject: Re: [U2] Reading a Unix file from another machine.

In a message dated 11/10/2010 4:55:04 AM Pacific Standard Time, 
ggal...@wyanokegroup.com writes:


> This sounds like a job for a quick perl routine. 
> Read the file in byte by byte, and AND it with 127, then write it
>    out byte by byte to a new file.
> 
> George
> 

No George this will not work.
Each "byte" you read will be 8 bits, so you'll be grabbing an extra "bit" 
from the next byte which is wrong you see.

You have to read it in 7 bits at a time, and you cannot.  That's why my 
56bit read makes sense.

Will 56bit Johnson
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