ALZ to TAR.BZ (TBZ) Converter

Convert your alz files to tar.bz online & free

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How to convert ALZ to TAR.BZ

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose tar.bz or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your tar.bz file right afterwards

About formats

ALZ is a proprietary archive format created by ESTsoft, a South Korean software company, as the native format of their ALZip archiver first released in 1999. The format was designed to address a specific need in the Korean market: splitting large archives into multiple volumes for distribution when email attachment size limits and slow internet connections made transferring large files impractical. ALZ archives support file compression, multi-volume splitting with configurable segment sizes, and basic file organization with directory structures. The format became widely adopted in South Korea, where ALZip established itself as one of the most popular archiving utilities due to its free availability for personal use and localized Korean interface. At its peak, ALZip was installed on a majority of Korean personal computers, making ALZ a common interchange format for file sharing within the country. One advantage is reliable multi-volume handling — ALZ was specifically engineered for splitting and reassembling archives across volume boundaries, a feature that was central to its design rather than an afterthought. The format's tight integration with ALZip provides a streamlined user experience for compression and extraction tasks. While ALZ saw limited adoption outside South Korea due to the availability of universal formats like ZIP and RAR, it remains encountered in files originating from Korean sources and can be extracted using ALZip, 7-Zip, and other compatible utilities.
Developer: ESTsoft
Initial release: 1999
TAR.BZ is a compound archive format pairing the TAR archiver with bzip compression. The TAR layer concatenates files into a single stream with full Unix metadata (permissions, ownership, timestamps, symlinks), and the bzip algorithm compresses the resulting stream. The bzip family of compressors uses block-sorting techniques derived from the Burrows-Wheeler transform, which rearranges data to group similar bytes together before applying move-to-front encoding and Huffman compression. This approach typically achieves better compression ratios than gzip/Deflate, particularly on text and source code. TAR.BZ archives are common on Unix and Linux systems for distributing source packages and backups where improved compression over TAR.GZ is desired. One advantage is strong compression on text-heavy data — block-sorting algorithms excel at compressing source code, log files, and structured text, producing meaningfully smaller archives. The two-layer design is another practical strength: the TAR container handles archiving concerns (metadata, directory structure) while the compression layer operates on the full concatenated stream, maximizing cross-file redundancy exploitation. TAR.BZ files can be processed by standard Unix tools and extracted by 7-Zip, WinRAR, and other cross-platform archivers.
Developer: Julian Seward
Initial release: 1996