one file. Mostly the compression is a waste, as the Internet already compresses (so I have been told), and for sure when I "sz" the You have been mislead; while Usenet News feeds are sometimes compressed, Internet connections in general are not. I have a citation of a paper somewhere (mentioned on the com-priv mailing list) which (if I recall correctly) said that less than 1/3 of the traffic over
compresses (so I have been told), and for sure when I "sz" the The compression is only *partly* for the benefit of reduced
the NSFnet backbone used any kind of compression... transmission time -- more often files at ftp sites are compressed to save disk space at the ftp site, and possibly to reduce ftp transit time to remote sites. (That said, there are some versions of ftpd, namely the wuarchive one, that given a foo.Z if you request foo it will automatically decompress it for you in case you don't have compress; I think the same support for gzip exists (is trivial in any case), though I don't know if many sites have it installed. _Mark_ <eichin@paycheck.cygnus.com> ... just me at home ...