yourfiles.tar.xz
Memes
Rules:
- Be civil and nice.
- Try not to excessively repost, as a rule of thumb, wait at least 2 months to do it if you have to.
Looks more like a one-way hash to me.
This is a one-way hash.
.
I do NOT understand how zip is still the default. I use .tgz wherever I can.
Because of your comment, I did a quick google search and pretty much every source says that .tar.gz is also pretty ancient and not that good (from a compression point of view). For better compression, you can use the xz or 7zip formats. The former is more used on Linux, if that's what you're using.
Lzo or lzma is best for compression. Also depends on the compression rate. KDE Ark is awesome
Compatibility with literally anything under the sun that can decompress a compressed file.
But isn't that's given with tgz too?
Except of course Windows iirc
Yep, but Windows is still the majority right now... And i'm sure there are a lot of people out there that don't have 7zip installed (why doesn't MS include their own implementation already ?)
And this is the problem imo. If you NEVER change a thing you will never improve
They do but its useless. Winrar can handle .tar.* too
Windows, Android, iOS do not open them by default.
You can do it on iOS using Siri Shortcuts.
I don't get how they add all these formats to Shortcuts but only Zip into the file app...
Spotted the Linux user
You got me!
tar just wraps, doesn't compress. so more accurate would be the pillows in a looser bag that doesn't squish them even a little :)
Cuts them into nice stripes so they fit onto a tape spindle though.
Reminds me of the "grandma.zip" meme
Yay this is now a URL. If your intention was not to post a URL to some random website not loading anything but javadscript, put a "" before the link I guess
Test "example.\com"
Fuck Google
Naw thats grandma.mp3 or grandma.jpg because thats clearly lossy compression not lossless.
Best explanation of tar/tar.gz that I have seen
Why use this over .7z? I'm legit curious.
Why use this over .xz? I'm legit curious.
Also, 7z does not store file permissions. Doesn't matter for a bunch of text/media files, but needed for distributing software.