Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Software, Reviews, Retro Mac
TUAW Review: StuffIt Deluxe 2010
If there's one Mac application that has seemingly been around forever, it's StuffIt. This compression and archiving utility was the tool to use for compressing files years ago, and I'll still occasionally run into a .sit file extension when pulling up old files. The original application was the source of a bit of Mac folklore, as it was developed and supported for quite a while by a young student by the name of Raymond Lau. Mac OS X did its best to kill off StuffIt by adding built-in support for Zip compression, but the utility has continued to flourish over the years. During the last week, Smith Micro released the newest version of the application, StuffIt Deluxe 2010 (US$79.95, with an introductory price of US$29.95 through October 15, 2009).
Since compression has been part of Mac OS X for quite a while, you might think that this application would have limited usefulness. Smith Micro is spinning StuffIt Deluxe 2010 as a better way to share large files over the Internet. How does it work? Read on, my friends...
When first we met the
When Techspansion 
The fine folks over at
Peter Svensson of the Associated Press likes the look of Apple TV as a gadget but declared that its video output 
I've
been tinkering with compression settings on videos, trying to find the best balance of size, quality, compression
settings and compatibility for my video-capable iPod ever since 
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