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DESCRIPTION
StuffIt, (formerly StuffIt Standard) includes StuffIt Expander for expanding over 30 file compressed and encoded file formats, and DropStuff for creating archives in Zip, TAR or StuffIt X format.
DropStuff is completely customizable. Create multiple Preference Profiles to meet your needs: Compress files and automatically burn them to CD/DVD; compress and upload archives to either an FTP server or your MobileMe iDisk; create Zip and StuffIt X archives protected with encryption...The customization possibilities are nearly endless. Save these Profiles as Droplets on your Desktop, Dock, or other convenient location. Then drag and drop files to the Droplet to archive using your custom preference settings.
Are you getting "Operation Not Permitted" errors when you try to open a Zip archive? Use StuffIt instead. StuffIt can open those password protect Zip archives. Need to send files securely? StuffIt can create encrypted Zip archives, too.
Do you want to send a Zip archive to a Windows user? Use StuffIt to Zip archives that don't include extraneous Mac data.
A Note about StuffIt Standard's Premium Features
Unregistered, DropStuff will run with all features enabled for a 30 day trial period. After the trial period these features will become disabled:
- CD/DVD Burning
- FTP/MobileMe iDisk uploading
- Segmenting
- Encryption
When you enter the serial number you receive, the Premium features will be restored.
For more features, check out the full StuffIt Deluxe suite.
WHAT'S NEW
Version 14.0:
- Updated StuffIt X Image recompressors make archives smaller, faster
- Added StuffIt X recompressor for WAV files
- Expansion support for archives created with the latest versions of StuffIt
- This release is English only.
REQUIREMENTS
Mac OS X 10.4 or later.
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| StuffIt 2010 User Reviews (79 posts) | Write A Review |
 | Oct 27 2008 |
STAR-AFFINITY Horrible new icons! Especially when they are shown small, like .sitx archives attachments in an email. Before one could see they were small boxes, now they look like some "green-blob-with-a-faint-square"-thingy. http://home.mac.se/star-affinity/horrible_icons.png (Version 13.0.1) | |
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 | Sep 29 2009 |
RPAEGE "Expansion support for archives created with the latest versions of StuffIt". This is a feature? Wouldn't one take that for granted with ANY new version? There is really nothing at all compelling about this "upgrade". (Version 14.0) | |
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 | Oct 22 2008 |
BACKPACKER Having used tools like iDMG to access bzip2 high-compression, it was a nice surprise to return to Stuffit to find that its v13.0.1 'Best Binary Compression' (custom-set at highest level) beat everything else I've tried so far. The time penalty for high-comp settings doesn't seem as great as that for older versions, and the sitx files are much smaller than bzip2-type files. The only quirk has been occasional crash-on-quitting under Leopard PPC on a Quicksilver G4. (Version 13.0.1) | |
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 | Oct 22 2008 |
PHASEANGLE Do not use the installer. It asks for password but shouldn't very sus. Previous versions just copied to disk so I searched the package and found the folder no problems (Version 13.0.1) | |
| [ 2 Replies - Reply ] | |
Replies:
 | Oct 27 2008 |
STUFFIT StuffIt Standard is completely self-contained. No other components are installed anywhere on your machine. The admin password is required in case your account is a non-Admin user and you do not have write-permissions to the Applications folder. Smith Micro, Inc. (Version 13.0.1) | |
 | Mar 19 2009 |
PHASEANGLE Still this promotes the bad practice of people entering their password for any installer that asks for it. (Version 13.0.3) | |
 | Dec 4 2007 |
OWENOJO This is a shocking, sloppy piece of junk. As many others here have said, it is useless. It cant even correctly open its own file format! Back in olden times, stuffit expander and its related formats, sit, bin , hqx and the dreaded sea thingie, were the standard mac archive formats. Now that many files are zipped, os x deals with these no problem, this thing is only needed to do one thing: open its one native format: a format you only encounter when a) someone made the mistake of encoding a file with this monstrosity, and b) to open old archives/ obsolete software you downloaded. IT CANT EVEN DO THIS RIGHT. version 12, 11, all cant extract a .sit properly without showing zero files, or missing files. How can Smith Micro/Alume/Aladdin (ive lost track!) market this evil, vile bastard offspring off years gone by anymore? Get the free "the unarchiver". it works. (Version 12.0.1) | |
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Replies:
 | Dec 23 2007 |
BEBDABHRHBRWEFG 3R§5Y5H4WTEDSFB the unarchiver won't open sitx files. until it does [or people stop exchanging files in crappy stuffit format!] i have to keep this bloated POS hanging around on my hard drive - just in case :-( (Version 12.0.1) | |
 | Feb 25 2007 |
C.BUTTON Absolutely horrendous piece of software. Firstly the small-time developers behind it make you jump through far too many hoops to get a download for what is after all free software, then it's been so poorly coded that it's useless for the purpose it was designed for. Macs have been using dual processors for some time now, yet this app which could *really* benefit from being multi-threaded still only uses one. Nearly every other decompressions app out there is multi-threaded and sees huge performance benefits, but this doesn't and as a result takes forever to compress/decompress large files. Not that it'll take the millions of hours the poorly coded estimate will give you (if you even get one, on multi file archives it rushes to 100% after one file then stays there for ever....), but it's just plain slow. Back in the days of OS 7/8/9 this app was a must. With the advent of the built-in zip compression of OS X this is a vestige best left to the past. Yes, it creates files a few percent smaller than a zip, but then it takes forever for the person you send files to to find the decompresser and install it, assuming they even know where to look. For compressions stick with the Finder's .zip, and for decompressions use The Unarchiver. Both are free and much, much better than this legacy, proprietary lump of slow, buggy bloatware. Sorry Allume, you used to be cool but now you just suck. (Version 11.0.2) | |
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 | Jan 28 2007 |
NIBBLING HELL GOAT This is a truly dreadful piece of software that would have been dead and forgotten by now were it not for the proprietary compression scheme. Stuffit got a foot in the door in the Classic Mac era, when cross-platform interoperability was less of a concern. These days I can only imagine the people that distribute files in .sit format are those who paid for Stuffit in good faith and would rather not feel like they'd wasted money. And so for the minority of developers who aren't using .dmgs or standard zip files, most users have the expander installed. None of this would be a problem if the expander actually worked. Rather, the typical behaviour is that a crudely designed progress window pops up, informs the user that the operation will take several million hours to complete (if only I were exaggerating), then closes, leaving behind a directory which should contain the archived files, but doesn't. And I've heard the "it's Tiger" argument, but Tiger is almost two years old now, and the fundamentals of file creation were not changed so drastically with 10.4 as to cause this kind of behaviour. It's bad programming, period. With the news of free unarchivers that will handle Stuffit archives with a better degree of reliability than the official tool, perhaps we can lay this to rest finally, and keep it as one of those fond Yesteryear memories - along with System 7, CD caddies and the Happy Mac. (Version 11.0.2) | |
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Replies:
 | Feb 17 2007 |
NYTEWURK I absolutely agree. I gave up on Stuffit back in OS 9 days, but it just won't go away. I personally enjoy using 7zx for (.7z) compression as well as .rar, .tar, .tgz, and "The Unarchiver" for handling decompression. If it weren't for n00bz still using the proprietary .sitx format, I'd be rid of Stuffshit, I mean Stuffit --which is really nothing more than buggy bloat-ware. In the land of compression Stuffit software loses. Therefore, anyone still using this software is a loser j/k. Why? Because there are better, free alternatives for file compression --i.e. 7zip, bzip, gzip, tar, rar (among others). (Version 11.0.2) | |
 | Mar 20 2007 |
GANNET While I hate StuffIt just as much as the next guy and agree with practically everything said here I'll just note that AFAIK, RAR is not free either. 7z typically provides the best compression ratio out of all the free compressors I know of but the absolute best compression ratios can only be found with proprietary formats. For practically everything, bzip2 suits me just fine though - almost as good as 7z and much faster. (Version 11.0.2) | |
 | Sep 22 2006 |
CARL B. Betterzip does a far better job for a smaller price and it is only a few months old. I mailed the developer once with a problem and got an answer in two hours, the bug fix was available after 3 days. Try that with Allume! (Version 11.0) | |
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 | Sep 21 2006 |
JOSHUA KAPLAN Stuffit simply said sucks. Its slow and buggy and I found an alternative thats free and way better called: THE UNARCHIVER (Version 11.0) | |
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 | Sep 21 2006 |
AIKOUSHA Why does this company keep making tiny little corrections and jack up the version number, yet, keep removingt legacy formats. I discovered that with the 9 version I lost access to a large number of old data files... those from back in the day when HD space was very precious. Had to actually idg out a Mac II load it with OS7 and swap out with floppies to get the files. That's unforgivable! BRING BACK the legacy formats (or at least little expanders for them) before I'm upgrading this program! (Version 11.0) | |
| [ 1 Reply - Reply ] | |
Replies:
 | Oct 20 2006 |
DAVIDLASKA You are right! (Version 11.0) | |
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