A big problem for people with low speed USB devices is the actaul trasfer speed, primarily when harnessing lots of small files - a cabinate feature (basically zipping all the modules/updates) would fix this.
Cabinate packing/compression?
Started by Stabhappy, Oct 31 2007 09:37 PM
5 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 31 October 2007 - 09:37 PM
#2
Posted 06 November 2007 - 03:49 PM
I don't know what's the possibility to implement that...
#3
Posted 06 November 2007 - 04:19 PM
The exe files are already compressed so it wouldn't improve much the size or the speed.
In fact it is better to have small files because USB works in bursts. It will loose speed for long transfers (as oposed to Firewire).
For old desktop PCs I would recommend adding a USB 2.0 PCI card (less than 15 euros). For old portables a PCMCIA (or PC-Card) USB 2.0 card may be too expensive (around 40 euros) so the cheapest option is to burn the autopatcher folder to a CD-RW (around 50c) which should be 4 times faster than USB 1.1 (a 40x CD drive transfers data at 6MB/s while a USB 1.1 transfers at 1.5Mb/s)
In fact it is better to have small files because USB works in bursts. It will loose speed for long transfers (as oposed to Firewire).
For old desktop PCs I would recommend adding a USB 2.0 PCI card (less than 15 euros). For old portables a PCMCIA (or PC-Card) USB 2.0 card may be too expensive (around 40 euros) so the cheapest option is to burn the autopatcher folder to a CD-RW (around 50c) which should be 4 times faster than USB 1.1 (a 40x CD drive transfers data at 6MB/s while a USB 1.1 transfers at 1.5Mb/s)
#4
Posted 08 November 2007 - 04:00 AM
A PCMCIA to USB 2.0 card is only 10-12 USD online, so it's not expensive at all. Also, you could use WinRAR to create an archive of the files if you really wanted to. (WinRAR is free online, just search for it.)
#6
Posted 11 November 2007 - 02:08 PM
Well maybe it's only a problem with very small files then - I've always harnessed large time gains when archiving files before a transfer.
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