7-Zip is a file archiver with a high compression ratio and 7-Zip is open source software that supports (reads and writes) many poplar archive formats (zip, rar, 7zip, iso). The current recommended version is 7-Zip 9.22 beta.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/sevenzip/forums/forum/45797/topic/4492007
7-Zip began in 1999 and is actively developed by Igor Pavlov.
Unfortunately, the icons that come with the installation file are old looking. Good People came up with a method of changing them after installing 7zip. I found that this method works like a charm:
http://thatnetsite.com/2010/06/replacement-icons-for-7-zip-ver3/
I made a batch of svg files and turned them into ICO files (I used IcoFX - The Free Icon Editor to convert the PNG to ICO). Enjoy the SVG.
7-Zip is a file archiver with a high compression ratio and 7-Zip is open source software that supports (reads and writes) many poplar archive formats (zip, rar, 7zip, iso). The current recommended version is 7-Zip 9.22 beta.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/sevenzip/forums/forum/45797/topic/4492007
7-Zip began in 1999 and is actively developed by Igor Pavlov.
Unfortunately, the icons that come with the installation file are old looking. Good People came up with a method of changing them after installing 7zip. I found that this method works like a charm:
http://thatnetsite.com/2010/06/replacement-icons-for-7-zip-ver3/
I made a batch of svg files and turned them into ICO files (I used IcoFX - The Free Icon Editor to convert the PNG to ICO). Enjoy the SVG.
These are recent images I converted to vectors with this command:
for i in *.jpg; do convert "$i" "`basename "$i" .jpg`.png" && autotrace -despeckle-level 15 -color-count 6 -input-format PNG -output-file "`basename "$i" .jpg`".svg -output-format svg "`basename "$i" .jpg`.png"; done
###
Try it!
Here are some banner's I developed for the Spread Open Media movement. I couldn't upload the svg for some reason, but here are the pngs. There are several different ideas here. I like the "Get SOM" slogan. It's catchy and can have several meanings...but is intended to tell people to support open media file types. I'd appreciate any comments