DropDMG 3.6.1
DropDMG introduction:
1. DropDMG is a practical tool for quickly creating disk mirroring (DMG) file archives.
2. DMG is a very popular packaging and disk image format under Mac. Although many software are packaged into DMG format files for transmission, making DMG requires the use of the Mac’s own Disk Utilities (Disk Utilities) Many steps are cumbersome.
3, DropDMG can quickly package the disk image into a compressed file, supports drag-and-drop of files and folders, supports multiple output formats and conversion of mirroring formats, whether it is transmission over the Internet or direct backup, it is easy to grasp.
4. The interface of DropDMG is very simple, with only a toolbar and task window.
5. To make DMG, just prepare all the files, put them in a folder, and then drag and drop the folder into the DropDMG window.
6. If you want DMG resources to look more beautiful, you can set your personality in Preferences.
DropDMG is the easiest way to create macOS disk images, as well as cross-platform archives. Just drag and drop a folder or file and you’re done. Or, you can drag an existing disk image or archive onto DropDMG to convert it to any of the other supported formats or to burn it to CD or DVD.
DropDMG supports advanced options such as encrypted and segmented disk images, WYSIWYG layout with background pictures and custom volume icons, and rich-text license agreements in multiple languages. There are many time-saving features, and it can also be automated via AppleScript, the command-line, and Automator.
Updated the user interface for macOS 11 Big Sur:
- Redesigned the application icon.
- The main window uses the new inline title bar style, the toolbar defaults to icon-only mode and supports the new large icon style, and the toolbar icons have been updated.
- The Preferences window uses the new, centered toolbar style and has updated icons.
- Table views in the Preferences window have been updated.
- The user interface now reflects the fact that macOS 11 removes support for creating NDIF disk images.
- The Layouts section of the manual has updated guidance on background picture dimensions that takes into account the window layout changes in macOS 11.
- Updated the Custom volume icon feature for Big Sur.
- Worked around a macOS bug that prevented progress bars from being drawn.
- Worked around an animation glitch.
- Added support for LZMA-compressed disk images on macOS 10.15 and later. This format is even more tightly compressed than bzip2, with slightly slower compression speed and much faster decompression.
- When using the dropdmg command-line tool, you can now specify additional parameters in combination with –config-name to override the values in the configuration. (This also works with the corresponding AppleScript command and parameters.)
- Configurations now show a Gatekeeper badge on the icon when the disk image is code-signed.
- Various operations that used to require multiple passphrase prompts when dealing with an encrypted disk image now require only one.
- DropDMG no longer lets you try to codesign encryped disk images, as macOS does not support that.
- DropDMG now requires macOS 10.9 or later.
- When encountering various kinds of file permissions errors, DropDMG will now recommend that you grant it Full Disk Access.
- Added more fine-grained control over DropDMG’s layout checks, so that it can still ensure that icon sizes and positions are correct even if you’ve told it to ignore a Finder error that causes the window size to be slightly off.
- DropDMG no longer considers it to be an error if an icon position is off by only a fraction of a point, which can happen with certain combinations of file types and Finder view settings.
- Worked around a bug in macOS 10.15 that could cause a spurious “Permission denied” error when using the Change Image Passphrase…, Convert Image/Archive…, or Verify Image… command.
- Removed support for Growl, as all supported macOS versions now have Notification Center.
Compatibility: OS X 10.9 or later, 64-bit processor
Mac cracked apps screenshot:
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