
Maybe I’m not like most, but I like my software free. I’ll search and search for a free alternative before breaking out my checkbook to spend money for something that doesn’t even end up functioning the way in which I need it to.
I recall my Windoze daze many moons ago, when I first started writing software. During that crazy time I read a book by the infamous David Platt, Why Software Sucks…and what you can do about it. I throughly enjoyed the book and I reflect back to it from time to time even now. Something that rings in the back of my mind whenever faced with a difficult software decision; number one, is this software easy to use? number two, does this software do everything that I need it to do? number three, is it pleasant to look at? number four, has the developer used every resource available to make the application as small as possible? I know you are probably thinking, why go to all that trouble just to find and use the “perfect” software, or is there even such a thing? In my experience, it’s all worth it when you happen upon software that is, what I consider, truly perfect.
DMGConverter by Sunskysoft is such software. In comparison to some of the commercial alternatives such as DMG Architect at $29.99 by Sourcebits or DropDMG by C-Command Software at $20.00, better yet DropStuff included in the Stuffit Deluxe Package for a whopping $79.99 were not exactly what I would call even close seconds. I’ve gone to such lengths as to try Springy by Dragan Milić which had a handy contextual menu feature, but although listed as a prime feature, wouldn’t password protect my .dmg? DMG Architect was very nice, but it was bloated with features that I didn’t need or that I didn’t want to read a manual in order to figure out.
DMGConverter has a nice interface, drag and drop capabilities, password protection, read only permissions assignment, it’s lightweight and has another feature that can be useful for those that would like to create .iso or .cdr images. Not to mention, the large variety of volume formatting choices. Simple and easy to use, no reading required. And it’s free. This is why software, at least for Mac, doesn’t always have to suck. (link)