First post, by MrFlibble
- Rank
- Oldbie
I was looking for any PKUNZIP alternative for DOS apart from Info-Zip's UnZip, and here I found info on a (probably) obscure late-90s/early 2000s archiver called IMP. The programme is available for DOS and Windows and offers its own archive format (which apparently gained very little traction as I've never heard about it before), but also can unpack ZIP archives.
I gave it a try in DOSBox (pick the Aus mirror at the Wayback Machine snapshot to download the file), and from my tests it vastly outperforms both PKUNZIP and UnZip in terms of speed. The 32-bit version of UnZip generally seems to work faster than PKUNZIP in DOSBox when the dynamic CPU core is available, but slows down when normal core is forced -- whereas IMP gives faster results even under these conditions. I wonder what kind of optimizations the developers made to accomplish this?
IMP was originally a shareware programme, but in the early 2000s it was released as proprietary free software. I haven't tried their own format, but it appears to use principles and features similar to those in RAR, with the option to build "solid" archives for greater compression, optional built-in recovery information and the like.