![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() It even has an encryption feature.Īctually I think this is one of the cases, where there is no need for asymmetric encryption at all. Infinitely superior to WinZip in every way (except for the fact that it doesn't do disk spanning). Heck, I have managed to install and use the Microsoft ZIP folder on Windows NT 4.0 (regsvr32 zipfldr.dll), and it ran perfectly fine. It runs on virtually every Win32-based Microsoft OS. And if you look hard enough, you can actually find a copy of it on Microsoft's web site (disguised as an update/bug fix for the ZIP folder it won't install if you don't have it already, but you can extract the files from the self-extracting CAB and install it manually). The first version of Windows to include it as part of the operating system was Windows ME. ![]() Oh, and by the way, the Windows ZIP folder class has been around since Windows 98, when it came with the Windows 98 Plus! pack. Of course, if you want to verify this yourself, you are going to have to make sure that you test it on a virgin XP box that you haven't raped yet by installing WinZip on it.that'll kill the built-in ZIP "folder" class as WinZip messes with the file associations. Yes as other posters have pointed out, you can not only open ZIP files in Windows XP natively and use them as if they were normal folders *without installing a third-party piece of software*, but you can add and remove files from these ZIP archives quite easily (drag-'n-drop) and even create new ZIP archives quite easily, too: either right-click file -> Send To -> Compressed Folder, or right-click empty space -> New -> Compressed Folder, and start dragging things into it. ![]()
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