ABSTRACT

Most binary systems do not usually value the color trait of the binary symbols, 0 and 1, in the information content of those binary symbols. Usually monochromatic, usually black, the two symbols. 0 and 1, have no color value added to them as an information unit. The amount of information per unit or bit is vital to a transmission system. Some bits of information, either a 0 or a 1, are singular in that no value is weighted to the fact that being a monochromatic entity is of no value to the amount, or ‘content’, of that unit or bit. Chromatic values increase the amount of information stored or carried in a unit or bit and can be based on variations of the color spectrum. Multiple units or bits, sequences of 0’s and 1’s, in both random and non-random patterns can form information patterns by corresponding color contrasts and similarities.