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The .ZIP file format was designed by Phil Katz of PKWARE and Gary Conway of Infinity Design Concepts. The format was created after Systems Enhancement Associates (SEA) filed a lawsuit against PKWARE claiming that the latter's archiving products, named PKARC, were derivatives of SEA's ARC archiving system. [3]
Yes by file (286 and higher only) Yes Yes No Yes Yes No No Yes LX: OS/2 (2.0 and higher only), some 32-bit DOS extenders.EXE: Yes by file Yes Yes No Yes Yes [12] No No Yes PIM/XIP: PalmDOS (MINIMAX applications only).PIM/.XIP: No (x86 only) Yes No No No No No No No DL: MS-DOS System Manager applications (HP LX series only).EXM: No (186/188 and ...
File archivers Data compression Shell integration 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 ...
CUPS was initially called "The Common UNIX Printing System". This name was shortened to just "CUPS" beginning with CUPS 1.4 due to legal concerns with the UNIX trademark. [7] CUPS was quickly adopted as the default printing system for most Linux distributions. In March 2002, Apple Inc. adopted CUPS as the printing system for Mac OS X 10.2. [8]
On the other hand, a valid magic number does not guarantee that the file is not corrupt or is of a correct type. So-called shebang lines in script files are a special case of magic numbers. There, the magic number consists of human-readable text within the file that identifies a specific command interpreter and options to be passed to it.
All of the Linux filesystem drivers support all three FAT types, namely FAT12, FAT16 and FAT32.Where they differ is in the provision of support for long filenames, beyond the 8.3 filename structure of the original FAT filesystem format, and in the provision of Unix file semantics that do not exist as standard in the FAT filesystem format such as file permissions. [1]
In their review of Linux Mint 18, ZDNet said "You can turn the Linux Mint Cinnamon desktop into the desktop of your dreams." [34] In their review of Linux Mint 22, It's FOSS praised Cinnamon 6.0 by stating "Linux Mint complements its name as a refreshing offering in the world of Linux distributions. It does not fail to provide useful features ...
Note that in addition to the below table, block capabilities can be implemented below the file system layer in Linux (LVM, integritysetup, cryptsetup) or Windows (Volume Shadow Copy Service, SECURITY), etc.