How to compress a
folder on windows (NTFS compression)
NTFS compression
makes files smaller on your hard drive. You can access these files normally –
no need for cumbersome zipping and unzipping. Like with all file compression
systems, your computer must use additional CPU time for decompression when it
opens the file.
However, this doesn't necessarily mean it will take any longer to open the file. Modern CPUs
are very fast, but disk input/output speeds haven’t improved nearly as much.
Consider a 5 MB uncompressed document – when you load it, the computer must
transfer 5 MB from the disk to your RAM. If that same file were compressed and
took up 4 MB on the disk, the computer would transfer only 4 MB from the disk.
The CPU would have to spend some time decompressing the file, but this will
happen very quickly – it may even be faster to load the compressed file and
decompress it because disk input/output is so slow.
On a computer with a
slow hard disk and a fast CPU – such as a laptop with a high-end CPU but a
slow, energy efficient physical hard disk, you may see faster file loading
times for compressed files.
When to Use and When
Not to Use NTFS Compression
NTFS compression is
ideal for:
Files you rarely
access. (If you never access the files, the potential slow-down when accessing
them is unnoticeable.)
Files in
uncompressed format. (Office documents, text files, and PDFs may see a
significant reduction in file size, while MP3s and videos are already stored in
a compressed format and won’t shrink much, if at all.)
Saving space on
small solid state drives. (Warning: Using compression will
result in more writes to your solid state drive, potentially decreasing its
life span. However, you may gain some more usable space.)
Computers with fast
CPUs and slow hard disks.
NTFS compression
should not be used for:
Windows system files
and other program files. Using NTFS compression here can reduce your computer’s
performance and potentially cause other errors.
Servers where the
CPU is getting heavy use. On a modern desktop or laptop, the CPU sits in an
idle state most of the time, which allows it to decompress the files quickly.
If you use NTFS compression on a server with a high CPU load, the server’s CPU
load will increase and it will take longer to access files.
Files in compressed
format. (You won’t see much of an improvement by compressing your music or
video collections.)
Computers with slow
CPUs, such as laptops with low-voltage power-saving chips. However, if the
laptop has a very slow hard disk, it’s unclear whether compression would help
or hurt performance.
How to Use NTFS
Compression
Now that you
understand which files you should compress, and why you shouldn’t compress your
entire hard drive or your Windows system folders, you can start compressing
some files. Windows allows you to compress an individual file, a folder, or
even an entire drive (although you shouldn't compress your system drive).
To get started,
right-click the file, folder, or drive you want to compress and select
Properties.
Click the Advanced
button under Attributes.
Enable the Compress
contents to save disk space check box and click OK twice.
If you enabled compression for a folder, Windows will ask you whether you also want to encrypt sub-folders and files.
In this example, we saved some space by compressing a folder of
text files from 356 KB to 255 KB, about a 40% reduction. Text files are
uncompressed, so we saw a big improvement here.
Compare the Size on disk field to see how much
space you saved.
Compressed files and
folders are identified by their blue names in Windows Explorer.
To uncompressed these files in the future, go back into their
advanced attributes and unchecked the Compress checkbox.
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