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Password protection Multiple volumes Self extraction File repairing Batch conversion Unicode file / directory names [a] Encryption Filename Encryption 7-Zip: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes ALZip: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes [b] No Unknown Unknown Archive Manager: Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes Archive Utility: Yes Yes No Un ...
7-Zip is a free and open-source file archiver, a utility used to place groups of files within compressed containers known as "archives". It is developed by Igor Pavlov and was first released in 1999. [2] 7-Zip has its own archive format called 7z introduced in 2001 [12], but can read and write several others.
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In addition to more popular and general-purpose archive formats including 7z, Tar, Zip, PeaZip supports the ZPAQ, PAQ, and LPAQ formats. Although not suitable for general use due to high memory usage and low speed, these formats provide better compression ratios for most data structures.
An alternate LZMA algorithm implementation, with support for checksums and ident bytes. .lz4 LZ4: Unix-like Algorithm developed by Yann Collet, designed for very high (de)compression speeds. It is an LZ77 derivative, without entropy encoding. .lzma application/x-lzma lzma: Unix-like The LZMA compression algorithm as used by 7-Zip. .lzo ...
To manage and recover your account if you forget your password or username, make sure you have access to the recovery phone number or alternate email address you've added to your AOL account. If you know your username but need to reset your password, make sure you create a strong password after you're back in your account.
In most cases, xz achieves higher compression rates than alternatives like zip, [3] gzip and bzip2. Decompression speed is higher than bzip2, but lower than gzip. Compression can be much slower than gzip, and is slower than bzip2 for high levels of compression, and is most useful when a compressed file will be used many times. [4] [5]
However, asking users to remember a password consisting of a "mix of uppercase and lowercase characters" is similar to asking them to remember a sequence of bits: hard to remember, and only a little bit harder to crack (e.g. only 128 times harder to crack for 7-letter passwords, less if the user simply capitalizes one of the letters).