I noticed that the compression utility that comes with Windows isn't listed here. Is there a reason? :) Strawberry Island 19:15, 2 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Open source, proprietary, freeware and command line.
Command-line applications can be any or all of the other three groups, all of which themselves overlap (and the odd application might be in all four categories; it's not impossible). A better division might be proprietary versus free, or GUI versus command line. What's there now is neither informative nor easy to predict, and would be as usefully served as an uncategorized list. 82.163.145.48 (talk) 16:53, 2 January 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Where would ffdshow & ProRes 422 fall in this template? —IncidentFlux [ TalkBack | Contributions ] 17:36, 31 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]
I've trimmed this down to just software products/implementations. I'm still of the mind that this template is a disaster waiting to happen, and might TFD it, but we'll see how the trimming goes. —Locke Cole • t • c 11:53, 8 February 2009 (UTC)[reply]
bzip2, gzip, compress, and lzop are not archivers. They are pure compression only. They should not be listed under "archivers." --Spoon! (talk) 03:10, 5 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I 've seen the implementations for the MPEG 4 ASP and the MPEG 4 AVC formats, but where are the implementation lists for MPEG 1, MPEG 2?
I think the template should be split in "Video Compression Software Implementations", "Audio Compression Software Implementations" etc
Now it's so big that's terrifying, and it will grow larger if we add Mpeg 1, Mpeg 2, Theora and Dirac
Is Tar really an archiver with compression? From `man tar`: GNU ‘tar’ saves many files together into a single tape or disk archive, and can restore individual files from the archive. Artem-S-Tashkinov (talk) 09:50, 16 May 2010 (UTC)[reply]