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<div dir="auto">Ok. So that is a little beyond my knowledge base. Is there a way, having exported the blobs, to decompress them?</div>
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<div name="messageReplySection">On May 12, 2020, 11:28 PM -0500, Maik Qualmann <metzpinguin@gmail.com>, wrote:<br />
<blockquote type="cite" style="border-left-color: grey; border-left-width: thin; border-left-style: solid; margin: 5px 5px;padding-left: 10px;">The actual blob is first of all a QByteArray compressed with qCompress.<br />
<br />
Maik<br />
<br />
Am Mittwoch, 13. Mai 2020, 05:05:41 CEST schrieb Gilles Caulier:<br />
<blockquote type="cite">Hi,<br />
<br />
blog are images in fact in wavelets compression format PGF :<br />
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_Graphics_File<br />
<br />
Best<br />
<br />
<br />
Gilles Caulier<br />
<br />
Le mer. 13 mai 2020 à 04:56, Wesley Smith <wss7932@gmail.com> a écrit :<br />
<blockquote type="cite">I have managed to lose an entire collection of images spanning years.<br />
I've tried every way to get them back but, they are gone. I can still<br />
see all of the thumbnails and so I know I can somehow extract them but, I<br />
don't know how. It's the only thing I have left of them. I know they're<br />
small but, that's better than gone. I have tried opening the database in<br />
sqlite browser and extracting, I've tried a python script that was<br />
hopeful but, the files exported are not images, just *.blob. What can I<br />
do?<br /></blockquote>
</blockquote>
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br /></blockquote>
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