Difference between revisions of "Stacker"
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[[Image:stacker2 box.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Stacker 2.0]] | [[Image:stacker2 box.jpg|thumb|right|200px|Stacker 2.0]] | ||
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− | Stacker | + | '''Stacker''' was a program from STAC electronics that featured the lZS compression algorithm that was known for being pretty fast. |
− | + | Stacker would create a [[file]] on your [[disk]], then present that file as a virtual disk that your programs could run. Stacker could even compress your 'C' drive then swap the virtual D/C at runtime. The big limitation of stacker is that it only dealt with the [[FAT file system]], and the largest compressed volume thusly could be 2GB. Stacker was big when [[hard disk]]s were typically well under a gigabyte, and were very costly to replace, esp in [[lap-top]]s. | |
− | Stacker was | + | There even was a version of Stacker for [[OS/2]], although it still was limited to FAT disks, and the installation required the OS/2 [[operating system]] be on a FAT disk. |
+ | Stacker was eventually bypassed by Microsoft DOS 6's 'doublespace', then [[NTFS]] v3's ability to compress folders. | ||
− | {{stub}} | + | {{semi-stub}} |
− | [[Category:Compression Software]] | + | |
− | [[Category:MS-DOS Software]] | + | [[Category: Compression Software]] |
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category: MS-DOS Software]] |
+ | [[Category: OS/2 Software]] |
Latest revision as of 14:18, 7 March 2021
Stacker was a program from STAC electronics that featured the lZS compression algorithm that was known for being pretty fast.
Stacker would create a file on your disk, then present that file as a virtual disk that your programs could run. Stacker could even compress your 'C' drive then swap the virtual D/C at runtime. The big limitation of stacker is that it only dealt with the FAT file system, and the largest compressed volume thusly could be 2GB. Stacker was big when hard disks were typically well under a gigabyte, and were very costly to replace, esp in lap-tops.
There even was a version of Stacker for OS/2, although it still was limited to FAT disks, and the installation required the OS/2 operating system be on a FAT disk.
Stacker was eventually bypassed by Microsoft DOS 6's 'doublespace', then NTFS v3's ability to compress folders.