Background: File compression programs allow you to conserve
disk
space and
bandwidth by reducing the size of files.
Most popular file compression programs use a variation of either the
Lempel-Ziv compression method or the Hauffman compression method,
but some newer compressors achieve even higher compression rates using an
algorithm called arithmetic coding.
The earliest file compression program was ARC, which was developed
in the mid-1980s. But the first one to come into widespread general use was
PKZIP in 1989 (which popularised the .Zip file format). However, this
leadership was usurped by WinZip in the mid-1990s. WinZip was specifically
developed as a file archiver and compressor for Microsoft Windows
and was included with all versions of Windows from Windows95 onwards, which
decimated PKZIP's market share.
Today there are a wide number of file compression programs available. But
since market dominance requires that both the sender and receiver have a
compressor which can create and extract files in the same compressed
format, most of the smaller compressors (as defined by market share) have
had a very tough time gaining traction even when they offer superior
compression to .Zip files (which many do).
One which has had good success is WinRAR, which was developed by Eugene
Roshal in 1993 and has gone on to become the second most popular file compressor
for the Microsoft Windows platform next to WinZip. These two and four other
popular ones are listed below: