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We appreciate your patience as we improve our online experience.
12-22-2015 07:08 AM - edited 12-22-2015 07:12 AM
7zip is not the standard that a regular .zip file is. It might want to be, but most people don't have the means to unzip it.
As for your VI's, all 3 seem to behave about the same for me. Which one should I be looking at and how should I be using it in order to see the problem you are trying to describe?
12-22-2015 11:09 AM - edited 12-22-2015 11:26 AM
@Labuser16383 wrote:
OK, besides that seven zip is really well known as the standard for PD zip.
I am not familiar with the term "PD zip". Please use full words to avoide confusion. What does "PD zip" mean? And yes, 7-zip is a very well known program, but 7z is not a very universal format for compressed file archives. You can eaily use 7-zip to create and open regular zip files. Thats' what I do. 😄
12-22-2015 12:49 PM
I'm not really going to get into what is the standard compression format. It's just convenient because.zip files were natively handled in Windows since Windows XP.
12-22-2015 01:24 PM
@billko wrote:
I'm not really going to get into what is the standard compression format. It's just convenient because.zip files were natively handled in Windows since Windows XP.
I actually use it as an indicator of the intelligence of the computer owner. For example if winzip is installed, I am probably dealing with a moron. 😄
I do have 7-zip installed, because it can do much more (e.g. extract files from an iso image, etc.) and it is free and open source. The native windows tools also don't seem to use multiple cores and using 7-zip is orders of magnitude faster to compress and uncompress (on my 16 core xeon). However I have run into problems when optimizing the zip output for size. Some of the advanced 7-zip options don't seem to be compatible with native compressed folder tools of windows. Always use the 7-zip default option to create zip files and you should be fine. I never use 7z format.
12-23-2015 04:11 AM
Sorry i use an 13" laptop at the moment so that i can try out things when i'm on the way.
In this case maximized windows are the only useful option.
Thank you for the tipps. I see I'm thinking too complicate sometimes. Hope it will become better with more experience.
12-23-2015 07:09 AM
@Labuser16383 wrote:
Sorry i use an 13" laptop at the moment so that i can try out things when i'm on the way.
In this case maximized windows are the only useful option.
Thank you for the tipps. I see I'm thinking too complicate sometimes. Hope it will become better with more experience.
One of the best ways to gain experience points is hanging around here - even when you don't have a question. Poke around n threads you think are interesting. Ask (relevant) questions even if you didn't start the thread. 🙂
12-23-2015 12:02 PM - edited 12-23-2015 12:07 PM
@Labuser16383 wrote:
Sorry i use an 13" laptop at the moment so that i can try out things when i'm on the way.
Size is irrelevant. It's the resolution that matters. 😉 (My 14" laptop is 1920 x 1080 and my eyes are pretty good :o)).
07-11-2019 09:04 AM
the pd zip was possibly refering to a program that started in the DOS days. Pkzip.exe, Pkunzip.exe, etc. This was the best back in the 80's in my opinion. It was window-"ized" at some point, and absorbed into the collective.
You can never have enough useless information. It makes average info look even better!!
😉