MacOS X does too, actually, though adding a password is a bit tricky. As I’ve written about in another article [see: Create password protected Zip archive on a Mac]. If you delete the zip files from the folder, and then zip another group of items, the new file will be called Archive 4.zip, even though Archive.zip, Archive 2.zip, and Archive 3.zip no longer exist (or at least, not in that folder).
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One curious aspect of the numbering system is that if you delete the Archive.zip files at a later date, and then compress multiple files in the same folder, the new Archive.zip file will have the next number in the sequence appended to it; it won't start over. For example, if you compress three groups of multiple items in a folder, you'll end up with files called Archive.zip, Archive 2.zip, and Archive 3.zip. If you delete the zip files from the folder, and then zip another group of items, the new file will be called Archive 4.zip, even though Archive.zip, Archive 2.zip, and Archive 3.zip no longer exist (or at least, not in that folder).