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  2. WinRAR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinRAR

    WinRAR is a trialware file archiver utility, developed by Eugene Roshal of win.rar GmbH. It can create and view archives in RAR or ZIP file formats, [ 6 ] and unpack numerous archive file formats. To enable the user to test the integrity of archives, WinRAR embeds CRC32 or BLAKE2 checksums for each file in each archive.

  3. RAR (file format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAR_(file_format)

    RAR files can only be archived with the proprietary WinRAR (Windows), RAR [11] for Android, command-line RAR (Windows, MS-DOS, macOS, Linux, and FreeBSD), and other software that has written permission from Alexander Roshal or uses copyrighted code under license from Roshal. The software license agreements forbid reverse engineering.

  4. Eugene Roshal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Roshal

    Roshal is best known as the developer of: RAR file format (1993) WinRAR file archiver (1995) FAR file manager (1996) The RAR compression algorithm is officially owned by his older brother Alexander, [1] because Eugene Roshal has "no time to concern himself with software development and copyright-related issues at the same time." [2]

  5. Comparison of file archivers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_file_archivers

    Information about what archive formats the archivers [ a ] can write and create. External links lead to information about support in future versions of the archiver or extensions that provide such functionality. Note that gzip, bzip2 and xz are compression formats rather than archive formats. File archivers. ZIP.

  6. Alexander Roshal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Roshal

    Alexander Borisovich Roshal (Russian: Алекса́ндр Бори́сович Роша́ль; () August 26, 1936, in Moscow – () May 21, 2007, there) was a Soviet-born Russian chess player and journalist, the co-founder and editor of the magazine 64.

  7. Unrar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unrar

    This is a free software version of UnRAR that uses a library that is based on an old version of RARLAB's UnRAR with permission from author Eugene Roshal. [3] It is probably licensed under the GPLv 2-only and unrarlib is available under the GPLv2-or-later or a proprietary license. Work ended in 2007. Unrarlib only supports the RAR2 format.

  8. AOL

    search.aol.com

    The search engine that helps you find exactly what you're looking for. Find the most relevant information, video, images, and answers from all across the Web.

  9. PeaZip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PeaZip

    PeaZip. PeaZip is a free and open-source file manager and file archiver [5] for Microsoft Windows, ReactOS, [6] Linux, [7][8][9] MacOS [10] and BSD [11][12] by Giorgio Tani. It supports its native PEA archive format [13] (supporting compression, multi-volume split, and flexible authenticated encryption and integrity check schemes) and other ...