02:36:56 I mean, there are people out there still using .tar.Z if you can believe it. Somewhat more commonly, .tar.gz 02:37:14 Compared to that, bzip2 is practically modern. 03:11:56 OK, I haven't seen a .tar.Z file in... 20 years? 03:12:11 but .tar.gz is still kinda popular for some releases 03:12:43 hell, people STILL use .zip in 2023 despite 7zip being commonplace (oh, if only RAR wasn't a proprietary mess controlled by a pesky Russian...) 06:54:05 Tor's admission that WASMs add attack footprint _on top of_ JavaScript kind of plays with the fact that I watch the Mozilla security reports each months and ever since WASMs were added, there's been about 8-12 CVEs I think, most of them High or Critical, per year, related only to WASMs. 06:54:42 I've disabled them in SeaMonkey. In case I whitelist something in NoScript _and_ it's not on my ubo lists. I don't want anyone to load a WASM. 06:55:07 This is the sort of thing where they would be malware implants or buttcoin miners before they'd be something I tried to load. 08:24:39 tomman: at this point I'd not be surprised Zip were the most portable option, just like FAT probably still is if you want to use a filesystem across different systems 08:25:38 but then, IIRC microsoft only added zip native support with Windows NT 5.1... 08:27:07 ZIP was a feature in Windows Me. 08:28:53 oh? native, not "plus!"? 08:29:20 either I never saw that or I forgot about it, I don't know Me that well but I've used it. 08:30:56 It was optional. 08:31:12 Just to make sure nobody knew what the hell it was, they named it compressed folders. 08:35:18 that's also what it was called in NT 5.1, but perhaps the difference is then that they appended "(ZIP)" to that or something (I'd have to check...) 11:42:38 Hi, the SeaMonkey 2.53.17 Release Notes links to the beta 1 download rather than the final release 11:46:29 Anyway, I'll leave it with you. Thanks 19:25:41 El-Aurian fixed. Thanks for the report.