Counter intuitively (for me at least):
print unpack ('B16', pack('n', $_))."\n" for (250..260);
0000000011111010
0000000011111011
0000000011111100
0000000011111101
0000000011111110
0000000011111111
0000000100000000
0000000100000001
0000000100000010
0000000100000011
0000000100000100
the "network" format (big endian) does what I want on a little endian (Windows) system.
Perl is Huffman encoded by design.
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