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3 answers

Probably the method you chose to compress it with and what you compressed it into, good choice is always to compress it into a .rar file and set it to maximum compression.

2007-02-22 17:35:47 · answer #1 · answered by kloops1 4 · 0 0

While I'm not sure about your numbers, the easiest thing to explain is that whatever is in your ISO (movies, music, etc) has already been compressed.

AVIs, MPEGs, DivX: all of the major media formats are already heavily compressed with their own formulas. When you run them through another compressor again, there's almost nothing left to optimize.

2007-02-23 01:39:32 · answer #2 · answered by John Galt 2 · 0 0

It may be that your file was already compressed, or was something that doesn't compress well.

2007-02-23 02:10:33 · answer #3 · answered by arbiter007 6 · 0 0

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