DropDMG 3.0.1


DropDMG 3.0.1 | Mac Os X | 6.4 MB
The easiest way to create and work with Mac disk images.


Overview
Create and convert disk images and archives with a simple drag and drop. There are also many other convenient ways to invoke DropDMG.
DropDMG supports all the major formats, including compressed .dmg files (smaller than Disk Utility’s), .sparsebundle files, .zip and .tar.gz archives, and hybrid disk images.
Configurations let you reuse common collections of options, and temporary options let you easily make one-off changes.
Quickly burn files, folders, or disk images to CD or DVD. Multi-session support lets you add files to an existing CD.
Delivering Software
Create .dmg disk image files, Apple’s recommended container format for deploying Mac OS X software.
Design reusable layouts with background images and pixel-perfect icon positioning.
Apply a license agreement that Mac OS X will display before the user can install your software. Licenses support rich text and multiple languages.
Automatically renders a custom volume icon that badges your application’s icon onto the white disk image icon, with the proper 3D perspective.
Make your disk images Internet-enabled so that Safari automatically expands them into a folder after download.
Store your license agreements and layouts in open formats (RTF, XML) under version control.
Backups, Archival, and Cloning
Disk images preserve Mac-specific metadata: resource forks, Finder labels, creation dates, ownership, extended attributes, etc.
Save disk space and network transfer time by compressing your files. Choose faster or more efficient compression.
Split large files or folders into multiple segments to burn them to optical discs or easily transfer them over a network.
Verify the integrity of your backups and archives to ensure that the media is still intact and that you’ll be able to restore them if needed.
Create a device image that records the exact contents of a data CD or DVD. You can then burn bootable backup copies of the disc, or double-click the disk image to access its contents as though the disc were still in your optical drive.
In one step, create a device image clone of an entire hard drive, optimized for restoring using Apple Software Restore or Disk Utility. This is useful for backups and for setting up multiple computers in a lab.
Optionally enter your administrator password so that DropDMG can back up all your files, with proper permissions and ownership, while unattended.
Encryption
Encrypt files that you want to keep private. DropDMG’s encrypted, writable disk images are faster and safer than Apple’s FileVault, but just as secure and searchable via Spotlight. Compact them to reclaim unused space.
Create encrypted, compressed disk images to securely transfer files via e-mail, iDisk, or FTP or to store backups safely off-site.
Choose from 128-bit and 256-bit AES encryption, approved by the U.S. National Security Agency.
Optionally store your passphrases in the Mac OS X keychain, so that you can quickly create and access encrypted disk images, without the hassle of double-typing or the risk of typos.
Mount disk images at specific locations in the filesystem, so that your applications can keep their support files encrypted.
Change the passphrase of existing encrypted disk images.
Mount encrypted, segmented disk images without having to enter the passphrase separately for each segment.
Advanced
Runs multiple operations simultaneously, so you that you can keep working while DropDMG processes in the background.
Takes advantage of multiple processor cores for faster compression and encryption.
Keeps a detailed log of all the successful operations as well as any errors, including statistics such as the throughput and how much space was saved using compression. New log entries are also reported via Growl.
Fast disk image mounting: turn off verification to quickly mount disk images, and mount encrypted disk images without having to re-type the passphrase for each segment.
Get detailed information about your disk images: their formats, partitions, compression ratios, checksums, etc.
Easily queue up bulk operations for creating, converting, mounting, verifying, getting info, burning, joining, etc. If multiple encrypted disk images share a passphrase, you only need to enter it once.
Make your favorite destination folders stay in the list of recent folders.
Process the names of the output files to add the current date or make the filename server-friendly.
Automate via AppleScript, the dropdmg command-line tool, and Automator.

WHAT'S NEW
Version 3.0.1: 
If you try to enter a serial number for DropDMG 2.x, rather than just complaining that it’s invalid, DropDMG now uses it to help you get a discounted or free upgrade and a 3.x serial number.
Fixed a bug where creating a disk image from the Finder’s contextual menu or keyboard shortcut sometimes didn’t work.
Fixed a bug where selecting a folder from the New from Folder/File… dialog didn’t work.
Fixed an internal error that occurred if you changed a configuration option while renaming a configuration.
Fixed a bug that could prevent the Automator action from working.
Fixed a regression where the -t argument to the dropdmg command-line tool wasn’t recognized.
Fixed a bug where the 
Base Name and Volume Name fields sometimes weren’t editable when dragging and dropping onto the main window. 
Enabled undo for the 
Base Name and Volume Name text fields (requires Mac OS X 10.6 due to a bug in previous versions). 
Fixed a bug where DropDMG would show two 
Help menus after auto-updating the command-line tool. 
Fixed a bug where the 
Names pop-up menu text was too wide when using YYYY-MM-DD-HHMMSS dates. 
Fixed the positioning of the log detail drawer.
Fixed a small memory leak.
The manual now recommends leaving space in a layout’s background picture for the Finder window’s path bar.
Updated the tooltips in the configuration options.
Updated the localizations.

Requires: Mac OS X 10.5 or 10.6