HKI
Dan Tobias (Talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{FormatInfo |subcat=Archiving |extensions={{ext|hki}} }} '''HKI''' is the "native" format of WinHKI, another of the many archiving programs which supports a number of popula...") |
m (adding identification as per executing freeware and creating HKI1 archive) |
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The compression methods are: | The compression methods are: | ||
− | * '''HKI1''': best for [[MP3]], [[CD]] images | + | * '''HKI1''': best for [[MP3]], [[CD]] images. Supported by free version. |
− | * '''HKI2''': best for programs and documents | + | * '''HKI2''': best for programs and documents. |
− | * '''HKI3''': best for some other sorts of data; very fast | + | * '''HKI3''': best for some other sorts of data; very fast. |
+ | |||
+ | == Identification == | ||
+ | Files start with ASCII {{magic|HKI}} and format '''HKI1'''<nowiki>'</nowiki>s following byte is {{magic|0x01}}, so '''HKI2''' and '''HKI3''' most likely have byte {{magic|0x02}} and {{magic|0x03}} at that position. | ||
== Links == | == Links == | ||
* [http://www.winhki.com/en/winhki1.htm Official site] | * [http://www.winhki.com/en/winhki1.htm Official site] |
Latest revision as of 20:57, 17 October 2023
HKI is the "native" format of WinHKI, another of the many archiving programs which supports a number of popular archive formats as well as introducing a new one of its own. It is named after the initials of its author (Hanspeter Karl Imp).
The WinHKI program (for Windows, as its name implies) comes in both free and paid versions. The paid version will create HKI archives using any of three compression techniques optimized for different sorts of files, while the free one will only compress with one of these techniques (though it will decompress archives compressed with any of them).
The compression methods are:
- HKI1: best for MP3, CD images. Supported by free version.
- HKI2: best for programs and documents.
- HKI3: best for some other sorts of data; very fast.
[edit] Identification
Files start with ASCII HKI
and format HKI1's following byte is 0x01
, so HKI2 and HKI3 most likely have byte 0x02
and 0x03
at that position.