In April 2000, Phil Katz was found dead in a hotel room in Milwaukee at the age of 37. He died alone from acute pancreatic bleeding caused by chronic alcoholism. When investigators later visited his home, they found a place filled with garbage and decaying food—a chaotic environment for a man who spent his life perfecting the art of organization.
In the late 1980s, the digital world was dominated by the ARC compression format. Phil Katz, a self-taught programmer from Milwaukee, believed he could do better. He wrote , which was significantly faster because he rewrote critical sections in assembly language. src.zip
The story of src.zip is not just about a file format; it is the tragic biography of its creator, , a brilliant but troubled programmer whose life was as compressed and complex as the data he handled. The Rise of PKZIP In April 2000, Phil Katz was found dead
: Over time, Katz became estranged from his family and his own company, PKWARE. He stopped showing up to the office and began living out of motels to avoid the legal warrants out for his arrest. The Final Archive In the late 1980s, the digital world was
: As a child, Katz was bullied and sought refuge in technology. He was deeply close to his father, Walter, and after his father's death, he began to withdraw from the world.