Hztxt |link| File
Just when Maya was about to give up, she received a cryptic message from an unknown sender: "Look for the txt in the Hz". The message was like a puzzle, and Maya's curiosity was piqued.
Unlike English, which has 26 letters, Chinese has tens of thousands of distinct glyphs. In the early days of computing, storing these characters was a nightmare. Worse, rendering them on screen and printing them via pen plotters was virtually impossible. Standard outline fonts (like TrueType) used complex shapes. If you asked a 1990s plotter to draw a standard Songti character, the pen would lift and lower hundreds of times. It would take minutes to write a single note, shaking the machine to pieces in the process. Just when Maya was about to give up,
The engineers who coded HZTXT did something brilliant. They realized that a Chinese character drawn slowly by a robot looks wrong, but drawn quickly —at high velocity—the jagged edges blur into something legible. HZTXT is a font designed for motion, not static display. In the early days of computing, storing these
| Model | IMDB Accuracy | TextFlipped Accuracy | FLOPs (Relative) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | BERT-Base | 94.3% | 31.2% | 1.0x | | Char-CNN | 91.1% | 62.5% | 0.4x | | | 93.8% | 89.4% | 0.3x | If you asked a 1990s plotter to draw



