overcompress

overcompress

(ˌəʊvəkəmˈprɛs)
vb (tr)
(Computer Science) computing to excessively apply a compression program to (electronic data), thus distorting it
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Furthermore, when a significant volume of bone graft material is required, there is risk that the screw can displace the graft or overcompress the fracture site.
In addition, wet shoes cannot absorb shock as effectively and will tend to overcompress. Rotating pairs so they have a couple of days to dry out before running in them will help.
When people see that water, they often assume the valve didn't close, so they crank down harder, which overcompresses the washer, greatly reducing its life.
The voiceover does not accompany the 'visualized flash-back', as Smith's overcompressed description implies; it follows, separately.
You can use it to remove blemishes from a photo, repair overcompressed JPEGs, or replace unwanted details and larger objects.
In The Phoenix and the Tortoise and The Signature of All Things, the typical line is seven or eight syllables long and features three heavy stresses, and it is consistently supple, neither fragmented nor overcompressed, because of Rexroth's use of punctuation.
Part of the blame may be laid on adherence to facts: Covering a roughly two-decade span, pic's events too often seem overcompressed, with psychological depth sacrificed.
But he's pretty certain that unless ASkyB is willing to compromise reception quality by jamming as many channels as it can into an overcompressed environment, the technology for satellite to go local on any realistic level is at least several years off.