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zips

ZIPs can refer to two distinct systems: ZIP codes used by the U.S. Postal Service to route mail, and ZIP files, a widely used compressed archive format.

ZIP codes were introduced in 1963 to improve mail sorting. A five-digit code covers a broad geographic

ZIP files are a compressed archive format created in 1989 by Phil Katz for PKWARE. They typically

The two uses share the name but are unrelated; context is required to determine which ZIP is

area;
the
ZIP+4
extension,
added
in
1983,
adds
four
digits
for
more
precise
routing.
The
first
digit
designates
a
broad
region;
the
next
two
narrow
to
a
sectional
center
facility
or
city;
the
final
two
refine
the
delivery
area.
ZIP
codes
support
automated
sorting,
address
validation,
and
demographic
analysis.
Although
they
are
primarily
used
in
the
United
States,
some
territories
and
special
cases
reference
ZIP
codes;
many
other
countries
use
"postal
codes"
with
different
formats.
use
the
deflate
compression
method,
though
other
methods
are
supported.
A
ZIP
archive
contains
a
central
directory
that
lists
its
contents,
enabling
random
access
to
individual
files.
ZIPs
can
be
encrypted
and
password-protected,
and
ZIP64
extensions
increase
size
limits.
The
format
is
cross-platform
and
widely
used
for
software
distribution,
backups,
and
data
transfer.
meant.