On 22.12.2011 20:27, Mirko Pilger wrote:
 The ftp is not the fastest one and 7z reduces the size by 40%.

*+1*

on desktop i'm mostly a windows guy and since the days of windows 95 my
first step after a clean system setup has been always to install a 3rd
party file archiver utility. i remember it was winzip in the beginning,
shortly after replaced by winrar. i used those archivers until i
discovered a file manager (and norton commander clone) named total
commander which supports most common compression formats. instead of the
windows explorer i use this piece of software for about a decade now.

i haven't known that windows supports the zip format out of the box
until i read about it here today!

when i take a look at my "downloads/dev/" folder (which contains mostly
compressed source code) i see a majority of zip archives, followed by
tar.gz, bz2 and then 7z.

the rar format was once known as the optimum for compressing multimedia
files and was and is still used a lot for (illegal) file sharing.
however rar is starting to become replaced by 7z in the latter use case
and will be the de facto standard for compressing big files (GB) in the
near future.

i use 7z myself for backups for a couple of years now and if i have the
choice i will always download 7z first, in absence look for tgz and
choose zip always last if there's nothing else available.

yes, i might be old fashioned and i'm pretty aware that both ram and
disk space is cheap but shouldn't we (developers and engineers) also be
at the forefront to push and introduce new technologies? isn't this even
our collective responsibility?

choice is good. let's make as much formats as download available as
possible and let the user decide. the download statistics might be a
surprise for some people.

</rant>

Don't the keyboards on your planet have Shift keys?

Reply via email to