Category: Windows / Compression tools
License: Shareware
Limitations : OS: Windows All
Size: 0.47 MB (488,816 bytes)
Introduction: nBinder is created as a file compressor a file binder a password protector an icon changer. Compress your executables so they ocupay less space and are extreamly more difficult to reverse engineer (hack). Protect your movies, music, images, documents, projects etc.with password and compress them, tranforming them into exes, being able to run them later with the right password. Bind and compress executables or bind the dlls and other resource files to your executable so you can distribute your applcation as an single (smaller) executable. Protect your exe(s) with passwords, and at same time you may compress them and bind them with their dll(s) and other resources. You can bind two or more applications (dlls) into an existing one, being able to mask the other application(s) into the first one, also called the host. The applications for nBinder are many: from hiding files, password protecting and compressing movies, music, images, documents, projects etc. (by transforming them into an exe), to distributing applications containing one or more dlls or other resource files, as one executable file, making it more compact, much smaller and harder to reverse engineer. nBinder can bind both excutables and dll's or other files that might be needed by your executable. nBinder doesn't modify in any way the files added to be binded, it creates a new file (the output). When the output is ran it unpacks the binded files (called temporary files) and then executes them (if they are executables or their file type is in the Start File Types edit box) conforming to the options set in the Advanced dialog. If selected you can also protect the files. If selected the output file will require a password before unpacking and executing the file(s) included in it. You can even include multimedia files like movies, music, sounds or documents, projects etc. , compress them and protect them with password, also transforming them into executables, so that when run they are unpacked.