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StuffIt

StuffIt is a discontinued family of computer software utilities for archiving and compressing files. Originally produced for Macintosh, versions for Microsoft Windows, Linux (x86), and Sun Solaris were later created.[1][2] The proprietary compression format used by the StuffIt utilities is also termed StuffIt.

In December 2019, Smith Micro Software, the product's most-recent owner and developer, officially announced that StuffIt had reached its end-of-life and that StuffIt products would no longer be developed.[3] One last update did come out in December 2020 after the launch of the Apple M1 architecture to support that and Intel Mac systems through a universal binary of the program.

Overview edit

Stuffit
Filename extension
.sit
Internet media type
application/x-stuffit
application/x-sit
Type codeSIT!, SITD, SIT2, SIT5 (depending on file version)
Uniform Type Identifier (UTI)com.stuffit.archive.sit
UTI conformationpublic.date
public.archive
com.allume.stuffit-archive
Developed byRaymond Lau (creator), currently Smith Micro
Initial release1987; 37 years ago (1987)
Container forfiles, including resource forks

StuffIt was originally developed in the summer of 1987 by Raymond Lau,[4] who was then a student at Stuyvesant High School in New York City. It combined the fork-combining capabilities of utilities such as MacBinary with newer compression algorithms similar to those used in ZIP. Compared to existing utilities on the Mac, notably PackIt, StuffIt offered "one step" operation and higher compression ratios. By the fall of 1987 StuffIt had largely replaced PackIt in the Mac world, with many software sites even going so far as to convert existing PackIt archives to save more space.[citation needed]

StuffIt soon became very popular and Aladdin Systems was formed to market it (the last shareware release by Lau was version 1.5.1). They split the product line in two, offering StuffIt Classic in shareware and StuffIt Deluxe as a commercial package. Deluxe added a variety of additional functions, including additional compression methods and integration into the Mac Finder to allow files to be compressed from a "Magic Menu", or seamlessly browse inside and edit compressed files without expanding them using "True Finder Integration".[1] 2013-02-22 at the Wayback Machine

StuffIt was upgraded several times, and Lau removed himself from direct development as major upgrades to the "internal machinery" were rare. Because new features and techniques appeared regularly on the Macintosh platform, the shareware utility Compact Pro emerged as a competitor to StuffIt in the early 1990s.[citation needed]

A major competitive upgrade followed, accompanied by the release of the freeware StuffIt Expander, to make the format more universally readable, as well as the shareware StuffIt Lite which made it easier to produce. Prior to this anyone attempting to use the format needed to buy StuffIt, making Compact Pro more attractive. This move was a success, and Compact Pro subsequently fell out of use.

Several other Mac compression utilities appeared and disappeared during the 1990s, but none became a real threat to StuffIt's dominance. The only ones to see any widespread use were special-purpose "disk expanders" like DiskDoubler and SuperDisk!, which served a different niche. Apparently as a side-effect, StuffIt once again saw few upgrades. The file format changed in a number of major revisions, leading to incompatible updates. PC-based formats long surpassed the original StuffIt format in terms of compression, notably newer systems like RAR and 7z. These had little impact on the Mac market, as most of these never appeared in an easy-to-use program on the Mac.[citation needed]

With the introduction of Mac OS X, newer Mac software lost their forks and no longer needed anything except the built-in Unix utilities like gzip and tar. Numerous programs "wrapping" these utilities were distributed, and since these files could be opened on any machine, they were considerably more practical than StuffIt in an era when most data is cross-platform. With the release of OS X Public Beta, Aladdin Systems released StuffIt 6.0 which runs under OS X.

Stuffit X
Filename extension
.sitx
Internet media type
application/x-stuffitx
application/x-sitx
Type codeSITX
Uniform Type Identifier (UTI)com.stuffit.archive.sitx
UTI conformationpublic.date
public.archive
com.allume.stuffit-archive
Initial release2002; 22 years ago (2002)
Type of formatarchive file format
Container forfiles, including resource forks

Although it was late to market, Aladdin Systems introduced the completely new StuffIt X format in September 2002 with StuffIt Deluxe 7.0 for Macintosh. It was designed to be extendable, support more compression methods, support long file names, and support Unix and Windows file attributes. StuffIt X improves over the original StuffIt format and its descendants by adding multiple compression algorithms such as PPM, and BWT to LZW-type compression. It also added a "block mode" option, error correcting "redundancy" options to protect against data loss, and several encryption options. In January 2005, JPEG compression was added as a StuffIt X compression option (see the related 'SIF Format' below).

From the mid-1990s until the 2005 acquisition by Smith Micro Software, coinciding with the release of Mac OS X v10.4 "Tiger," StuffIt Expander came bundled with the Macintosh operating system.

Although Mac files generally did not use filename extensions, one of StuffIt's primary uses was to allow Mac files to be stored on non-Mac systems where extensions were required. So, StuffIt-compressed files save the resource forks of the Macintosh files inside them, and typically have the extension .sit. Newer (non-backwards compatible) Stuffit X-compressed files carry the file extension .sitx. Encrypted StuffIt archives created with the now-discontinued Private File utility will have .pf extensions. StuffIt-compressed ShrinkWrap disk images will carry .img or .image extensions. However, a Classic Mac OS version of StuffIt is needed to mount the images or convert them to a newer format readable in macOS.

Smith Micro Software offers free downloads of StuffIt Expander for Mac and Windows, which expands (uncompresses) files compressed using the StuffIt and StuffIt X format, as well as many other compressed, encoded, encrypted and segmented formats. The shareware application DropStuff permits the compressing of files into the StuffIt X format.

The StuffIt and StuffIt X formats remain, unlike some other file compression formats, proprietary, and Smith Micro Software charge license fees 2007-12-27 at the Wayback Machine for its use in other programs. Given this, few alternative programs support the format.

There was also a "self-expanding" variant of StuffIt files with a .sea extension that runs as an executable. A utility called unsea exists to turn such an executable into a vanilla sit file.[5]

Derivative products edit

StuffIt Image Format (SIF) edit

Early in 2005, a new JPEG compression system was released that regularly obtained compression in the order of 25%[6] (meaning a compressed file size 75% of the original file size) without any further loss of image quality and with the ability to rebuild the original file, not just the original image. (ZIP-like programs typically achieve JPEG compression rates in the order of 1 to 3%. Programs that optimize JPEGs without regard for the original file, only the original image, obtain compression rates from 3 to 10% (depending on the efficiency of the original JPEG). Programs that use the rarely implemented arithmetic coding option available to the JPEG standard typically achieve rates around 12%.)

The new technique was implemented as a StuffIt X format option in their StuffIt Deluxe product. They have also proposed a new image format known as SIF, which simply consists of a single JPEG file compressed using this new technique.

Pending filing of their patent, they retain knowledge of the details of this algorithm as a trade secret. Some details are disclosed in:[7] the high JPEG recompression is achieved by undoing the last step of the JPEG compression itself (the Huffman encoding of quantized transform coefficients). Instead, the transform coefficients are compressed by a more efficient algorithm (a predictive model based on the DC coefficients of neighboring blocks). Similar techniques are also applied for other image file formats such as GIF and TIFF and even the MP3 music file format. By means of decomposition, the relatively high compression rates for individual file formats can also be achieved for container file formats such as PDF, PSD and even ZIP.

StuffIt Wireless edit

On July 5, 2005, Smith Micro Software announced their acquisition and intention to expand the new JPEG recompression technique to wireless platforms and other file formats. The initial press release and preliminary information saw the first use of the title “StuffIt Wireless.”

StuffIt Expander edit

StuffIt Expander is a proprietary, freeware, closed source, decompression software utility developed by Allume Systems (a subsidiary of Smith Micro Software formerly known as Aladdin Systems). It runs on the classic Mac OS, macOS, and Microsoft Windows. Prior to 2011, a Linux version had also been available for download.

Notable features edit

Duplicate Folding edit

Duplicate Folding is a feature which saves even more space by only keeping one copy of a duplicate file in an archive. [8][9][10][11]

Issues edit

Backwards compatibility edit

Changes to the Stuffit compression format render previous versions of Stuffit or software using its API unable to decompress newer archives, necessitating installation of new versions. This incompatibility can be inconvenient for work flows where timely execution is of importance, or where the intended recipient's system is not capable of running newer versions of Stuffit. Though users are able to create archives in a legacy format, this functionality is not clearly exposed.[12]

Alternatives edit

macOS includes Archive Utility which decompresses the legacy open formats ZIP, GZIP, and BZIP2, and creates ZIP. In versions since 10.3 (Panther), it now preserves resource forks in the ZIP format, so Stuffit is no longer a requirement for Mac file compression. ZIP is also a de facto standard, making it more widely accepted for archives and sharing.

While StuffIt used to be a standard way of packaging Mac software for download, macOS native compressed disk images (DMG) have largely replaced this practice.

StuffIt might still be used in situations where its specific features are required (archive editing/browsing, better compression, JPEG compression, encryption, old packages). An open source alternative might be The Unarchiver, even if it doesn't support the last versions of the StuffIt file formats.[13] Some 3rd-party software, such as the Macintosh Finder replacement Path Finder, use the licensed Stuffit SDK to gain all the features of Stuffit.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Official vendor information about StuffIt for Linux and Solaris 2008-11-16 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Stuffit Archives, explains how to open StuffIt and StuffIt X archives on Linux
  3. ^ "Stuffit Application End of Life" (Press release). Smith Micro Software. December 1, 2019. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  4. ^ . www.raylau.com. Archived from the original on 2020-02-07.
  5. ^ "Archivers of Syllable". www.angelfire.com.
  6. ^ Gilchrist, Jeff. "ACT JPEG Compression Test". www.compression.ca.
  7. ^ Salomon, David (18 January 2010). Handbook of Data Compression. Springer. p. 1194. ISBN 9781848829039.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-08-31. Retrieved 2011-08-15.
  9. ^ "StuffIt Deluxe 2009 Keeps Evolving After 20 Years". TidBITS. 17 September 2008.
  10. ^ "Review: StuffIt Deluxe 2010". 30 January 2010.
  11. ^ "StuffIt - The Premier Compression Solution Celebrates Its 20th Anniversary with the Launch of StuffIt Deluxe 2009 for the Mac". www.businesswire.com. 17 September 2008.
  12. ^ "Macworld - News, tips, and reviews from the Apple experts". Macworld.
  13. ^ "The Unarchiver". StuffIt: No encryption; StuffIt X: Partial

External links edit

  • StuffIt official website
  • JPEG Compression Test
  • Conversation with Raymond Lau 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine
  • Stuffit Method 15 compression format (Arsenic)

stuffit, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, discontinued, fam. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message StuffIt is a discontinued family of computer software utilities for archiving and compressing files Originally produced for Macintosh versions for Microsoft Windows Linux x86 and Sun Solaris were later created 1 2 The proprietary compression format used by the StuffIt utilities is also termed StuffIt StuffItDeveloper s Aladdin Systems Smith Micro SoftwareStable release16 2Operating systemmacOS WindowsTypeData compressionLicenseProprietaryWebsitestuffit wbr comIn December 2019 Smith Micro Software the product s most recent owner and developer officially announced that StuffIt had reached its end of life and that StuffIt products would no longer be developed 3 One last update did come out in December 2020 after the launch of the Apple M1 architecture to support that and Intel Mac systems through a universal binary of the program Contents 1 Overview 2 Derivative products 2 1 StuffIt Image Format SIF 2 2 StuffIt Wireless 2 3 StuffIt Expander 3 Notable features 3 1 Duplicate Folding 4 Issues 4 1 Backwards compatibility 5 Alternatives 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOverview editStuffitFilename extension sitInternet media typeapplication x stuffitapplication x sitType codeSIT SITD SIT2 SIT5 depending on file version Uniform Type Identifier UTI com stuffit archive sitUTI conformationpublic datepublic archivecom allume stuffit archiveDeveloped byRaymond Lau creator currently Smith MicroInitial release1987 37 years ago 1987 Container forfiles including resource forksStuffIt was originally developed in the summer of 1987 by Raymond Lau 4 who was then a student at Stuyvesant High School in New York City It combined the fork combining capabilities of utilities such as MacBinary with newer compression algorithms similar to those used in ZIP Compared to existing utilities on the Mac notably PackIt StuffIt offered one step operation and higher compression ratios By the fall of 1987 StuffIt had largely replaced PackIt in the Mac world with many software sites even going so far as to convert existing PackIt archives to save more space citation needed StuffIt soon became very popular and Aladdin Systems was formed to market it the last shareware release by Lau was version 1 5 1 They split the product line in two offering StuffIt Classic in shareware and StuffIt Deluxe as a commercial package Deluxe added a variety of additional functions including additional compression methods and integration into the Mac Finder to allow files to be compressed from a Magic Menu or seamlessly browse inside and edit compressed files without expanding them using True Finder Integration 1 Archived 2013 02 22 at the Wayback MachineStuffIt was upgraded several times and Lau removed himself from direct development as major upgrades to the internal machinery were rare Because new features and techniques appeared regularly on the Macintosh platform the shareware utility Compact Pro emerged as a competitor to StuffIt in the early 1990s citation needed A major competitive upgrade followed accompanied by the release of the freeware StuffIt Expander to make the format more universally readable as well as the shareware StuffIt Lite which made it easier to produce Prior to this anyone attempting to use the format needed to buy StuffIt making Compact Pro more attractive This move was a success and Compact Pro subsequently fell out of use Several other Mac compression utilities appeared and disappeared during the 1990s but none became a real threat to StuffIt s dominance The only ones to see any widespread use were special purpose disk expanders like DiskDoubler and SuperDisk which served a different niche Apparently as a side effect StuffIt once again saw few upgrades The file format changed in a number of major revisions leading to incompatible updates PC based formats long surpassed the original StuffIt format in terms of compression notably newer systems like RAR and 7z These had little impact on the Mac market as most of these never appeared in an easy to use program on the Mac citation needed With the introduction of Mac OS X newer Mac software lost their forks and no longer needed anything except the built in Unix utilities like gzip and tar Numerous programs wrapping these utilities were distributed and since these files could be opened on any machine they were considerably more practical than StuffIt in an era when most data is cross platform With the release of OS X Public Beta Aladdin Systems released StuffIt 6 0 which runs under OS X Stuffit XFilename extension sitxInternet media typeapplication x stuffitxapplication x sitxType codeSITXUniform Type Identifier UTI com stuffit archive sitxUTI conformationpublic datepublic archivecom allume stuffit archiveInitial release2002 22 years ago 2002 Type of formatarchive file formatContainer forfiles including resource forksAlthough it was late to market Aladdin Systems introduced the completely new StuffIt X format in September 2002 with StuffIt Deluxe 7 0 for Macintosh It was designed to be extendable support more compression methods support long file names and support Unix and Windows file attributes StuffIt X improves over the original StuffIt format and its descendants by adding multiple compression algorithms such as PPM and BWT to LZW type compression It also added a block mode option error correcting redundancy options to protect against data loss and several encryption options In January 2005 JPEG compression was added as a StuffIt X compression option see the related SIF Format below From the mid 1990s until the 2005 acquisition by Smith Micro Software coinciding with the release of Mac OS X v10 4 Tiger StuffIt Expander came bundled with the Macintosh operating system Although Mac files generally did not use filename extensions one of StuffIt s primary uses was to allow Mac files to be stored on non Mac systems where extensions were required So StuffIt compressed files save the resource forks of the Macintosh files inside them and typically have the extension sit Newer non backwards compatible Stuffit X compressed files carry the file extension sitx Encrypted StuffIt archives created with the now discontinued Private File utility will have pf extensions StuffIt compressed ShrinkWrap disk images will carry img or image extensions However a Classic Mac OS version of StuffIt is needed to mount the images or convert them to a newer format readable in macOS Smith Micro Software offers free downloads of StuffIt Expander for Mac and Windows which expands uncompresses files compressed using the StuffIt and StuffIt X format as well as many other compressed encoded encrypted and segmented formats The shareware application DropStuff permits the compressing of files into the StuffIt X format The StuffIt and StuffIt X formats remain unlike some other file compression formats proprietary and Smith Micro Software charge license fees Archived 2007 12 27 at the Wayback Machine for its use in other programs Given this few alternative programs support the format There was also a self expanding variant of StuffIt files with a sea extension that runs as an executable A utility called unsea exists to turn such an executable into a vanilla sit file 5 Derivative products editStuffIt Image Format SIF edit Early in 2005 a new JPEG compression system was released that regularly obtained compression in the order of 25 6 meaning a compressed file size 75 of the original file size without any further loss of image quality and with the ability to rebuild the original file not just the original image ZIP like programs typically achieve JPEG compression rates in the order of 1 to 3 Programs that optimize JPEGs without regard for the original file only the original image obtain compression rates from 3 to 10 depending on the efficiency of the original JPEG Programs that use the rarely implemented arithmetic coding option available to the JPEG standard typically achieve rates around 12 The new technique was implemented as a StuffIt X format option in their StuffIt Deluxe product They have also proposed a new image format known as SIF which simply consists of a single JPEG file compressed using this new technique Pending filing of their patent they retain knowledge of the details of this algorithm as a trade secret Some details are disclosed in 7 the high JPEG recompression is achieved by undoing the last step of the JPEG compression itself the Huffman encoding of quantized transform coefficients Instead the transform coefficients are compressed by a more efficient algorithm a predictive model based on the DC coefficients of neighboring blocks Similar techniques are also applied for other image file formats such as GIF and TIFF and even the MP3 music file format By means of decomposition the relatively high compression rates for individual file formats can also be achieved for container file formats such as PDF PSD and even ZIP StuffIt Wireless edit On July 5 2005 Smith Micro Software announced their acquisition and intention to expand the new JPEG recompression technique to wireless platforms and other file formats The initial press release and preliminary information saw the first use of the title StuffIt Wireless StuffIt Expander edit StuffIt Expander is a proprietary freeware closed source decompression software utility developed by Allume Systems a subsidiary of Smith Micro Software formerly known as Aladdin Systems It runs on the classic Mac OS macOS and Microsoft Windows Prior to 2011 a Linux version had also been available for download Notable features editDuplicate Folding edit Main article Data deduplication Duplicate Folding is a feature which saves even more space by only keeping one copy of a duplicate file in an archive 8 9 10 11 Issues editBackwards compatibility edit Changes to the Stuffit compression format render previous versions of Stuffit or software using its API unable to decompress newer archives necessitating installation of new versions This incompatibility can be inconvenient for work flows where timely execution is of importance or where the intended recipient s system is not capable of running newer versions of Stuffit Though users are able to create archives in a legacy format this functionality is not clearly exposed 12 Alternatives editmacOS includes Archive Utility which decompresses the legacy open formats ZIP GZIP and BZIP2 and creates ZIP In versions since 10 3 Panther it now preserves resource forks in the ZIP format so Stuffit is no longer a requirement for Mac file compression ZIP is also a de facto standard making it more widely accepted for archives and sharing While StuffIt used to be a standard way of packaging Mac software for download macOS native compressed disk images DMG have largely replaced this practice StuffIt might still be used in situations where its specific features are required archive editing browsing better compression JPEG compression encryption old packages An open source alternative might be The Unarchiver even if it doesn t support the last versions of the StuffIt file formats 13 Some 3rd party software such as the Macintosh Finder replacement Path Finder use the licensed Stuffit SDK to gain all the features of Stuffit See also editList of archive formats List of file archivers Comparison of file archivers DiskDoublerReferences edit Official vendor information about StuffIt for Linux and Solaris Archived 2008 11 16 at the Wayback Machine Stuffit Archives explains how to open StuffIt and StuffIt X archives on Linux Stuffit Application End of Life Press release Smith Micro Software December 1 2019 Retrieved March 30 2020 Raymond Lau StuffIt www raylau com Archived from the original on 2020 02 07 Archivers of Syllable www angelfire com Gilchrist Jeff ACT JPEG Compression Test www compression ca Salomon David 18 January 2010 Handbook of Data Compression Springer p 1194 ISBN 9781848829039 StuffIt compared to Zip Archived from the original on 2011 08 31 Retrieved 2011 08 15 StuffIt Deluxe 2009 Keeps Evolving After 20 Years TidBITS 17 September 2008 Review StuffIt Deluxe 2010 30 January 2010 StuffIt The Premier Compression Solution Celebrates Its 20th Anniversary with the Launch of StuffIt Deluxe 2009 for the Mac www businesswire com 17 September 2008 Macworld News tips and reviews from the Apple experts Macworld The Unarchiver StuffIt No encryption StuffIt X PartialExternal links editStuffIt official website Raymond Lau s home page JPEG Compression Test Conversation with Raymond Lau Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Stuffit Method 15 compression format Arsenic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title StuffIt amp oldid 1208440666, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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