Oct 02, 2021 Keka is a file archiver for OS X. It is available for free, but donations are requested to further the project. Similar to making a donation, you can also purchase Keka on the Mac App Store for $1.99 USD. Supported compression formats: 7z. PeaZip For various output formats, including PEA, ARC, ZIP, and 7Z, the PeaZip application can create password-protected archives using 256-bit AES encryption. Install Keka from keka.io/en; Open Keka. Choose ZIP format type. Enter a password. Select use AES-256 encryption. Drag and drop files into the Keka window. Smart HR to outsmart the changing world. The world has changed, and it's going to keep changing. Keka HR helps your teams to adapt, evolve, and scale by working more effectively. Spend less time on mundane tasks and focus more on strategy. Turn data into smarter decisions and create experiences your employees will love.
@aonez
About optimizing icons.. I just used some free icns optimizing app from AppStore that makes an optimized version on drag&drop.. but how it optimizes was not very configurable and it didn't support dragging&dropping multiple items at the same time.
So I did some more searching now to find a better way..
Take a look at this: https://github.com/avl7771/createicns
It allows you to extract PNGs from an .icns file, so you can optimize them with a PNG optimizer of your choice and configure the optimizations how you want.. and then you can use createicns to make an .icns file from those PNGs and it keeps the optimizations when it creates the .icns file (the iconutil that comes with macOS doesn't keep the optimizations when it creates an .icns file). With a simple bash script you could run it on multiple items.
About HFS+ compression.. I see now that copy & paste from Finder also seems to respect the compression.. Kontakt 6 rutracker. I guess when I tested copying it before that maybe the size on disk didn't update right away or something like that.
Keka 1 1 256 Free
@gingerbeardman
About an app to manage HFS+ compression.. see if you can find some way for users to avoid unnecessary writes to disk if you are making an app for that.. so not just something that would monitor a folder for the user copying uncompressed files to it.. maybe some Finder extension to copy a file using ditto --hfsCompression
would be good.. although the best way would be if there was a way to compress new files before they are written to the disk, but I'm not sure if that can be done without having the whole uncompressed file in RAM first (like if you mounted a RAM disk as a directory, so files written to it would go to RAM and then automatically copied with ditto --hfsCompression
by some app that monitors that directory to some other directory on disk), which obviously wouldn't be very practical for very large files.