TUAW review: Sponge for Mac OS X
I don't know about you, but I have a tendency to accumulate junk on my Macs. I start off with a nice, fat, clean hard drive, and before you know it I'm starting to panic about running out of space.Sponge, from Dare to be Creative Ltd., is a US$26 program designed to look for the space-wasters on your Mac and help you get rid of them cleanly. There are other applications that do the same thing, Smith Micro's Spring Cleaning being the primary example of this. I actually shied away from cleaner applications since an earlier version of Spring Cleaning did a little TOO good a job a few years ago and rendered a Mac unusable until I reloaded the OS.
So it was with a great deal of trepidation that I decided to use Sponge to try to clean up my MacBook Air. It's a first-generation model with an 80 GB hard drive, of which 74.1 GB are actually usable. Since I was down to 16 GB of space, I figured that a quick cleaning might be in order. Read on for more about Sponge.
Time to Sponge-clean my MacBook Air
Sponge is a very small application -- only 1.2 MB. After installing the app through a drag-and-drop to the applications folder, I fired it up and was met with a very sparse user interface:

There are three primary tabs in Sponge -- Remove Applications, Sweep Disk Hogs, and Find Duplicates. I started with Remove Applications, since I knew that there were probably a lot of review apps that I needed to dump. Sponge does a surprisingly thorough search, not only in the Applications folder but in other locations as well. After getting my full list of applications, I went through the alphabetized list and deleted those that I knew I'd probably never use again.
Sponge not only gets rid of the applications, but any plists or support files for those programs. The files can either be moved to the Trash, or deleted immediately. I chose to move them to the Trash, and had to restart my MacBook Air after running the Remove Applications portion of Sponge in order to properly delete files that were in use.
After restarting, I emptied the Trash again and found that I now had 18.7 GB available. That was an improvement, but nothing spectacular. My next move was to run the Sweep Disk Hogs portion of Sponge. This took much longer than Remove Applications.

The results were eye-opening. I had forgotten that I had built a Windows Vista virtual machine on this Mac, and sure enough that was swallowing a huge 18.4 GB of my precious hard drive space. While I occasionally need to run virtual machines, I really didn't need to take up that much space for a VM that I rarely use. I decided to move the virtual machine file from the MacBook Air's hard drive to my portable backup drive, cleaning up a whopping 18.4 GB of space.
Since Sponge highlights the disk hogs by color (red indicates the most disk usage), it was simple to move through the various folders and see what was taking up space. Clearing out some caches and log files freed up another .5 GB, while running Remove Applications again pointed out how removing two seldom-used programs (Adobe Acrobat Professional and Bento) would give me back another 1.2 GB of space.
The last function, Remove Duplicates, looks for duplicate documents or files in any directory you choose. While I did have some duplicates, trashing them only freed up about another 100 MB. Remove Duplicates provides a side-by-side comparison of the files that are dupes, giving you an idea of where the files are and their creation and modification dates. Removing a duplicate file requires just one click from the Sponge interface.

The FInal Word
By the time all was said and done, I had recovered enough space to get to almost half-capacity on my drive -- I was up to 38.16 GB. Not bad. But could I have done the same without Sponge or one of the other cleaning applications? Absolutely.
If I had spent some time looking through my documents folder, I probably would have noticed the huge virtual machine file and decided that it was time for it to go. Likewise, browsing the file sizes in my Applications folder would have pointed out those programs like Adobe Acrobat Professional and Bento that I rarely used on my MacBook Air. For more experienced Mac users, I'm not sure I'd recommend Sponge or any other similar application.
On the other hand, Sponge was easy to use, fast, and quickly showed me exactly how much space I would recover by removing certain files. The application removal function made it simple to delete all of the Adobe Acrobat files with one click, although they were scattered.
The main competition for Sponge, Spring Cleaning, seems to be much more complete. It can take files that you may not want to delete and compress them into disk images for storage on an external drive. Spring Cleaning also provides regularly scheduled dumps of certain files. However, it's also nearly twice the price at US$49.99.
There's another possibility for those who are running into a space crunch on their Macs; just buy an external hard drive. A quick look around shows that 1 TB external hard drives are selling for as low as $100, so just moving some of those excess files to a new location might be a better idea than eliminating them altogether.
What software do you use to do your file cleanups, or do you simply keep moving files to a larger hard drive? Let us know by leaving a comment.
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Source: http://sponge-mac.com/
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I don't know about you, but I have a tendency to accumulate junk on my Macs. I start off with a nice, fat, clean hard drive, and before you...
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I agree with tony, I am completely scared of deleting anything. And from the above it still seems to me to be a risky business. Is there any bullet proof, dumb user, software to save space?
The review Steven states that after running the disk hog its easy to see what is using up space, which is fine but I personally wouldn't know which files taking up space I could safely remove or not. especially looking through his list with his "mac Kernels" and his "desktop DB,s". I would just close it all down and leave well alone,
I downloaded the full-functioning trial. 'Sponge' has crashed on me twice during the 'disk hog' process. I'm going back to Omni
March 16 2009 at 4:48 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyI am completely scared of deleting anything. And from the above it still seems to me to be a risky business. Is there any bullet proof, dumb user, software to save space?
March 16 2009 at 6:34 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyOnce you have 2.5+ TB of local storage plus a 1TB Time Capsule you don't really care about a few GBs.
March 16 2009 at 12:00 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyDoesn't appear that that little Capsule can back up all of your local storage.
Your mac comes with software to help you do this already.
/usr/bin/du
And the move to ZFS will make tallying disk space almost instant.
Also, for finding duplicates, I suggest trying fdupes. It is in MacPorts.
sudo port install fdupes
Sorry I do not understand your message. I spent too much time looking for something like /usr/bin/du on my mac. Would you please be more specific?
March 19 2009 at 2:06 AM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyIf you're the kind of person that forgets about VMs you've created, etc. (and I'm not being mean--I've done that myself) just open your hard drive, put it in list view, choose "Show view options" from the Finder's "View" menu, tell it to calculate all sizes (it'll probably take some time), then sort by size. If a folder is big, click the triangle to show its contents and the biggest subfolders will rise to the top.
March 15 2009 at 8:35 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyAPPCLEANER is also another free program which is exactly the same thing as APPZAPPER and I have both of them...and like them both
I would definitely not be buying this software as I have many other options to choose from that are free or I already have
but thanks for the great article as always
Another one I like is JDiskReport, which is also free and cross-platform. I always found the blocks of GP and DiskInventoryX less than intuitive, where as the pie-charts of jDiskReport a lost easier to skim-over.
http://www.jgoodies.com/freeware/jdiskreport/
umm... these austrians have blatantly ripped off omni disk sweeper in their disk hog feature.
it looks exactly the same. Omni Disk Sweeper is FREE and you can get it from the omnigroup.com website.
what's worse, it all looks EXACTLY the same.... EXACTLY the same. since omni disk sweeper has been around for such a long time and so good for a long time, and rather accessible (free fully functional trials), I would think that they have pretty much STOLEN that part of the app--- it doesn't even look like they coded this themselves. That would surprise me being that they are from the 21st district--- kinda a sheisty hood.
beware of this app. i have a weird feeling about it....
and anyway, the best feature is available for free from omnigroup.com anyway!
I don't know about the developers, but this does looks exactly like omni disk sweeper.
It was my first thought when I saw the layout.
OmniDisk Sweeper and GrandPerspective, both free and both do a good job.
March 15 2009 at 4:05 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyHot Apps on TUAW
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