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- From: iscjcw@uccvma.ucop.edu (Jerry Wilcox)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.system
- Subject: Re: Compression Software
- Followup-To: comp.sys.mac.system
- Date: 27 Aug 1992 23:33:57 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Office of the President
- Lines: 50
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <iscjcw-270892162422@ajax.ucop.edu>
- References: <1992Aug27.225430.16516@leland.Stanford.EDU>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: ajax.ucop.edu
-
- In article <1992Aug27.225430.16516@leland.Stanford.EDU>,
- ehle@leland.Stanford.EDU (Robert Ehle) wrote:
- >
- > Will someone explain to me as broadly (but still as usefully) as
- > possible what the difference is between Salient's two compression
- > packages is - Disk Doubler and Auto Doubler? If I am trying to
- > increase the capacity of my 20 meg SE hard drive, which program do I
- > want to get?
- >
- >
- > --
- >
- > Rob Ehle
- > Stanford University Press
- The two packages are somewhat similar, but you can use either one or both.
- Basically, the difference is that AutoDoubler works in a "automatic" mode
- periodically scanning the volumes for which it has been activated, looking
- for files that have not been compressed and which have not been marked to
- be left alone. When it finds such a file, it compresses it. Via a control
- panel, you have control of (1) how long the mac needs to be inactive before
- scanning starts, (2) what percentage of free space you are trying to
- achieve, (3) how long a file needs to be "unused" before it becomes
- eligible for compression, and (4) which specific files/folders should not
- be compressed (under System 7 you can also specify certain labels which
- designate files/folders which should not be compressed). Note that AD
- *never* automatically compresses anything in the System Folder.
-
- DiskDoubler offers manual compression. You select the file(s)/folder(s) to
- be compressed. DD also offers some additional functionality in that it can
- create archives and groups of compressed files.
-
- In either case the compression is transparent to applications that open
- files via the normal open mechanisms (there are some programs which do not
- and for which files cannot be compressed). Since the finder is, for this
- purpose, an application, launching a compressed application by
- double-clicking or other means, expands the application automatically. AD
- and DD differ in the way this is done: AD expands the application into RAM
- without expanding the file on disk, DD expands the application on disk,
- launches it, then recompresses it when you quit. Same is true with other
- files. DD does know when AD is running so the two don't interfere with each
- other.
-
- I hope this helps. I use both AD and DD on my Mac at home and they have
- been a big help to me. If you have specific questions, I'd be more than
- happy to try and answer them.
-
- -----------
- Jerry Wilcox - iscjcw@uccvma.ucop.edu
- All opinions expressed are MINE -- I'd have a different job if the
- University wanted me to speak for it.
-