We know that some of you are probably scratching your heads and asking, "who's stuffing the what now?" But lo-and-behold, SmithMicro is apparently still cranking away on new versions of its oldschool, ...
We've received our first reports of issues with StuffIt Deluxe (including StuffIt Expander) 10.0, released yesterday. Incorrect unstuff times MacFixIt reader Randy Smith reports that the new release ...
Yesterday we covered a report by Randy Smith that StuffIt Deluxe 9 (for OS X) is at times unable to "unstuff" StuffIt archives created using StuffIt Deluxe for OS 9. When attempting to unstuff these ...
Aladdin Systems today released StuffIt Deluxe 6.5, an update to its popular compression program. The new application includes many new features including some for Mac OS X. StuffIt Deluxe 6.5 includes ...
If you want to squeeze the greatest amount of data onto your hard drive, compression is the way to go — and the ZIP format has long been a trusted method that nearly any Windows user can invoke.
Deluxe 09 also includes Archive Manager, DropStuff 2009 and SEA Maker which lets users make OS X mini-installers using the StuffIt technology. There's also a new Remote Payload feature allows the SEA ...
With compression now built into Mac OS X 10.3 in the form of the Finder’s Archive command, has Aladdin’s StuffIt Deluxe outlived its usefulness? For remedial compression chores, perhaps. But if you’re ...
ALISO VIEJO, CA--(Marketwired - Aug 28, 2014) - Smith Micro Software, Inc. (NASDAQ: SMSI) Productivity and Graphics group today launched StuffIt Deluxe® 16 for Mac with Cloud Services Integration, a ...
Stuffit Deluxe 2010 ($50, 30-day free trial) is the latest iteration of Stuffit, which is the dominant file compression protocol in the Macintosh world. Stuffit handles all the common, and many ...
I've just installed this on my new OSX machine, and, with a lot of .sea or .sit files, when Stuffit Deluxe tries to open them, I get an error of type -43 ...
If you want to squeeze the greatest amount of data onto your hard drive, compression is the way to go — and the ZIP format has long been a trusted method that nearly any Windows user can invoke.
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