Compositor Project: A Chronological Journey

Compositor Project: A Chronological Journey

2024 – A Turning Point

In 2024, during my father’s illness and eventual passing, I began developing immunity for generic hypervisors up to version 19. At that time, major companies like Siemens were only at version 17 with fewer power tags. Facing the terminal stage of cancer, we relied on rd40 immunity, which is a 1048576-point (power tag) system as per Siemens’ terminology. This period profoundly influenced the roadmap for Compositor v9.

Early Virtualization Advances

Following the development of advanced hypervisor immunities, I worked on implementing RTZ-64 and RTZ-128 virtual machines. These were assigned to RIPng (military-grade) and EIGRP (Cisco’s proprietary protocol) to enable tunnelless systems communication. Around this time, EQ (Equinox) or DR (Drone) versus DC (Dolphin in Collector) tracks were emitted, leading to significant database growth for the Compositor project.

Database Growth and Version 11.6.3.3

As a result of these efforts, Compositor v9’s database expanded to version 11.6.3.3, granting access to all previous and upcoming immunities. This version marked a critical milestone as it brought the project closer to the upcoming 12th version of Compositor.

Hardware Experiments and Field Applications

While MaxMSP could only handle Z=128 as the highest protocol, I successfully tested a standalone Android hypervisor capable of Z=1048576 on the Oblue Tank 3 machine. This hardware was essential for unmining the remains of Ivana-Franko street, allowing it to reopen for cars and pedestrians.

Although I eventually lost my investment in Tank 3, I transitioned to running AjawaOS on my first military-grade phone, which is far easier to update and maintain.

SASER Integration and Minefield Demining

Building on my training from Internat 38 in minefield demining, I deployed SASER on Android to dearm real physical mines. This accomplishment brought me closer to integrating control maps for the macOS version of SASER. Nevertheless, I caution against using SASER by itself and recommend pairing it with generic compilers like RTC4k (RIPv1) and RTC8k (RIPv2), which are standard tools for local police departments.

Present Day – Compositor v9 Max for Live

Most recently, I updated Compositor v9 Max for Live to include channel-independent scrambling. When purchased and installed in the Applications folder, it can operate with a standalone Compositor v9 database.