Guess I am still nervous of Apple's long term chances.
I still was a little, until the Intel Macs came out. Now with Boot Camp to draw in the Windows users, I can see Apple easily grabbing a much larger market share over the next few years. That, and the iTunes/iPod combo have made Apple a valuable company in a pretty short amount of time.
Anyway it pays to make sure precious work is available no matter what computer you are on.
Yup, better safe than sorry. Hybrid disks are a great way to make sure either Macs or PCs can read them as native disks.
I will have a look at it and see how well it works and what sort of compression it is actually applying. One hopes it is nothing proprietry and something like ZIP or RAR which would be a long term viable archive method.
I've been tempted to try one myself. I'd like to see if it's just calling up Disk Utility's .dmg format, or if it's proprietary to Toast. The manual doesn't really say. This is all it says about a compressed disk:
To access a compressed disc:
1 Insert the disc into a drive.
The disc contains a single file containing the compressed contents of the disc.
2 Double-click the compressed file.
The file will decompress to the Desktop.
Wouldn't be hard to find out what it does without wasting a disk though, as long as you use a CD-RW or DVD-RW.
I would not have thought that Stuffit would slowly fade away as it has done.
Yes, they've been hanging themselves lately. It's a great tool since it can open just about any compression format out there, but it's greatest drawback is how incredibly slow it is creating its own .sit or .sitx format. From what I've read, it
still doesn't have multi processor support or multi threading. They seriously need to revamp the code from the ground up to bring people back. Right now, OS X's built in .zip support is killing their sales what with how slow Stuffit is. The two main things keeping it going is the better compression rates in its own format and being able to open most others.
Depending how it is done it can mean even small damage to the media can render the whole disk unusable.
Yup, there is a certain amount of risk backing up a compressed file. About all you can do is do a verify after creating the .dmg file. Then after you burn the disk, do a verify of that.