![]() This is through the integration of LZMA as well as LZMA2. 7z file format is offering the most effective and lowest compression ratio. It also has shell integration or a command-line interface. There are three ways of using the program from its GUI or Graphical User Interface, which is the most popular method. But if you are interested in 7Zip for Linux or 7Zip for MAC OS, the developers also support that. The 7Zip website is providing every interested user a download link for those computers running on 32-bit as well as 64-bit Windows versions. It’s easy, right?ħZip is capable of handling file formats like ISO, NTFS, DMG, and RAR among others. You can now open compressed files and make compressions on any of your files at will. Once the installation finishes, that’s it. ![]() ![]() Now click on the 7Zip installer and follow the on-screen prompts. The file is really small at around 1.5MB so the download should just take a couple of seconds. Click on which your system type belongs ( 32-bit or 64-bit). Now click to download 7Zip page and find your corresponding Windows system type. Find the “ System Type” and it should state there your Windows architecture. To check which Windows is currently installed on your system, go to the Windows Search service and type in “ System Information.” Once you see it, click on it to launch the System Information window. You should know whether your Windows is running on a 32bit or 64bit version. RIG#4 CPU: Intel i9 13900k | Motherboard: AORUS Z790 Master | RAM: Corsair Dominator RGB 32GB DDR5 6200 | GPU: Zotac Amp Extreme 4090 | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Streacom BC1.1S | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.The first thing you need to do is get the 7Zip file installer for your Windows version. RIG#4 CPU: Intel i9 13900k | Motherboard: AORUS Z790 Master | RAM: Corsair Dominator RGB 32GB DDR5 6200 | GPU: Zotac Amp Extreme 4090 | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Streacom BC1.1S | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k B9 OLED TV RIG#3 CPU: Intel i9 10900kf | Motherboard: Z490 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 4000 | GPU: MSI Gaming X Trio 3090 | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Crucial P1 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k B9 OLED TV RIG#2 CPU: Intel i9 11900k | Motherboard: Z590 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3600 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1300 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic EVO | Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 | SSD#1: SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX300 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k C1 OLED TV RIG#1 CPU: AMD, R 7 5800x3D| Motherboard: X570 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3200 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 2TB | Monitor: ASUS ROG Swift PG42UQ but i just checked, even my MEGA drive has either "standard download" or "download as zip". Really funny i just assumed windows simply wouldn't support this sort of thing because it was my first experience opening rar files, etc that windows just goes "nope, cant do that." (so you definitely need more than just zip in most cases i guess) but then something like Nvidia inspector is a rar file. Yeah, i see - still, as per above, whats the difference?Īlso i just looked at my more general programs and they are actually almost all zips or exes. I've seen rar and have downloaded it in the past, but they're so much less common that on a Windows PC, I genuinely can get by without 7zip or WinRAR installed on the system (though I would hate it). ![]() Google Drive, for example, compresses everything automatically as a zip archive. I've seen other formats used in the wild, but it's so infrequent compared to zip. I think that might just be your experience. Ps: the video was from the guy (Dave) who supposedly programmed it, amongst other things like Windows "taskmanager", pretty cool actually, i can link it if someone wants to see it, but i don't think it relates much to my question - because he doesn't talk about these more commonly used compression techniques / file archivers at all (and also seems a bit out of the loop regarding these things lol) So what's the deal with Windows' "zip" files not being used as much? ![]() (Yes, i can imagine some people use it more, but i just barely ever come across it, rar, etc is way more widespread in my experience) So whats the difference and why isnt zip, which is natively supprted by windows not used more widely? i always use 7zip, because that works with everything and almost nothing of the compressed folders/files i have is actually a "zip" file. I just watched a video about windows "zip" support and how it got integrated into the OS, etc, i thought "oh cool, yeah i use that a lot!". ![]()
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