What is the most reliable software that is available for free to open .zip files? I’m running Windows XP and Firefox. I prefer to avoid buying WinZip. Also, I’d like any mp3 files to be able to be moved out of the unzipping program.
I thought Microsoft purchased WinZip in order to include it in XP. In any case, zipping and unzipping is included in XP already.
To zip files and folders, right-click on them, and go to “Send To – Compressed (zipped) folder”.
To unzip, right-click and choose either “Open with – compressed (zipped) folders” or “Extract to…”.
I can go you one better. I was unzipping files with XP earlier today.
Right click on the file you want to unzip. Click on “Extract All…” - it’s the fourth selection. This opens the Extraction Wizard window. Click “Next”. This brings you to a window where you can select your destination. Click “Next” again. This unzips the file. When it’s done, there’s an exit window with a default setting of showing you the opened files. Hit “Finish” to see the files or unclick the default and hit “Finish” to exit without seeing the files.
I don’t know the internal workings, nor do I care. The important part to me is that when I choose “Open with – compressed (zipped) folders”, I get a window very similar to the Explorer or MyComputer window that I’m already familiar with, and it shows me the contents of the zipped file, including the entire folder structure, and number of levels deep. I can browse through it at my heart’s content looking at all the file names, and if I find any that are interesting, all I need to do is copy them (ctrl-c, edit/copy, whatever) to any location outside of the zipped file. Sometimes I can even open such files directly – I think that works for .txt but not for .exe, but I don’t remember for sure.
A good rule of thumb is that for XP, a zipped file is not much different than a folder.
What the heck? This isn’t a zombie? That info-zip page is straight out of the early 90s. It even talks about Windows 3.1 and editing your autoexec.bat, for chrissakes.
It should also be mentioned that you can just double click on the zip file and it will open in Explorer almost as if it were a regular folder. This will let you just drag individual files or embedded folders into other folders.
If you do for some reason want more functionality, WinRAR does ZIPs and RARs and TARs and lots of other stuff. Even though it bugs you upon startup to pay, you don’t have to pay.
I’m not trying to be argumentative, sorry if it’s coming off that way. But what OSes could one reasonably call Info_Zip “the standard” for compression?