

Its big brother, the full featured StuffIt Deluxe was widely used to create and encrypt archives that could easily be sent via e-mail.Įventually, Aladdin became Allume, and in 2005, Allume was purchased by Smith Micro Software.
#Stuffit deluxe 2010 serial mac os x
StuffIt Expander a simple utility to expand archives, was a standard third party add-on for all Macs up until Mac OS X 10.4, Tiger. StuffIt quickly became the de facto standard for compressing and archiving files in Mac OS, especially in 1990s when we had relatively limited and expensive disk storage. Recall that Raymond Lau developed StuffIt in 1987 and Aladdin Software was formed to market it. My next step was to figure out the chronology of the company, Aladdin, and the technology. And then, of course, my next thought was, mindful of the Snow Leopard upgrade I just did on some fairly new Macs, "What if a day comes, because of technical developments, that I can no longer open those archives? Will the current version of StuffIt Expander work all the way back to the beginning of StuffIt technology? What tools might I need to keep current? I decided to find out. A search with PathFinder showed that I had 2,882. That got me curious about how many StuffIt archives I had accumulated over the years. had also been encrypted, maybe by another app.was missing a needed resource fork (from Mac OS 9 and early Mac OS X days).So it appeared that I may have had a file that: sit files and they "unstuffed" just fine.
#Stuffit deluxe 2010 serial archive
So I dragged the archive to Stuff Expander 12, the latest version I had, and got this error message:Īnnoyed, but not alarmed, I did some investigating. The other day, I was working with some very old financial archive files on my Mac.

Even so, looking back in time can be the real issue. Even though StuffIt is in wide use in certain circles, many home users aren't planning a future with it. Government and university archivists worry about it a lot and so should you.

Data migration into the future is one of those things that Mac users should think about from time to time.
