Picture a scenario...
You`ve spent a substantial part of the day down-loading the latest, fastest, bestest shoot-em-up game demo. And of course, you`re not stupid, so you did this at work using the fast company internet connection. But you wouldn`t dare actually play the thing at work, far too risky, you don`t want to get fired after all. But it`s 56 MB, and the only way to get it home is to copy it onto 41 floppy disks.
Oh well. You spend eons zipping it onto a huge pile of floppies and eagerly take them home. You start unpacking them. It takes an age, but you`re so looking forward to the game. All is going fine, but then disaster strikes - the fortieth floppy is duff. You can`t read from it. You realise, with mounting dismay, that you`ll have to create the whole zip set again. All 41 floppies of it. Unlikely? A tall story you think? Well it happened to me. Really, it did.
Enter Slice`n`Splice. It slices huge files into floppy (or any other) size chunks, and then splices them back together again. Each chunk can be copied to a floppy independently of the rest. Once you have all the chunks where you want them, simply run Slice`n`Splice again (or run the optionally generated MS-DOS .BAT file) to splice the chunks back into the original file. If a floppy fails and a chunk is corrupted, then first of all Slice`n`Splice will detect this and warn you about it, and secondly, you only need to recopy that one bad chunk. Not the whole set.
You can even create a shortcut to Slice`n`Splice in the SendTo directory. Then simply right-click on a file, select Send To from the pop-up menu, then select Slice`n`Splice. Easy.
| Updated: | 2008-03-17 |
| License: | 25.00$ |
| Publisher: | SadMan Software |
| Size: | n/a |
| Require: | 32 bit Windows |
| System: | Win95, Win98, WinME, WinNT4x, WinXP, Win2000, Win2003 |
| Language: | English |
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