![]() ![]() With no other easy (that is, user friendly) way to update I tend to agree with the negative reviews of this app. A day later I tried a second time and got a server unavailable message. The first time I tried I got the spinning beach ball of death - the app froze up. Hopefully I’ve made my opinion clear that this app is ulcerous, fetid rubbish. (multiple comments, some may be on subsequent pages) If you’d like a more thorough comparison of TTP and the other leading contender, DiskWarrior, I’ve done some informal but fairly rigorous research and presented my findings on MacUpdate’s TTP and DW pages: Its directory rebuilding is still a bit inferior to DiskWarrior’s, but at its current pace of development it may be on par or superior to DW by the beginning of 2015. But the good news - especially for the developer - is that Micromat’s flagship product, TechTool Pro, has improved markedly with the introduction of version 7.x and subsequent updates. Since I bought licenses for both apps over ten years, DW has repeatedly and handily corrected many problems that TTP couldn’t fix or missed altogether - a shame because with such a halfassed main feature, TTP’s wealth of other capabilities are insufficient to justify its $100 price. For many years, I’ve been a true believer in DiskWarrior’s supremacy over TechTool Pro at rebuilding a corrupt or unbalanced directory, which is by far the most common cause of non-hardware problems in OS X. So, if you can afford only one disk utility, my recommendation is to go with TechTool Pro (but NOT its diminutive sibling ProToGo). It’s just a bunch of marketing drivel, though I suppose he couldn’t have said much more about such meritless junk. ![]() His smarmy product description (above) goes on for 4 paragraphs without saying much about what Checkmate actually does and even less about how it does it. This is such featureless and incapable software that even its developer is at a loss for words to articulate its virtues. In fact, I’d probably balk even at a $10 price point. Since several freeware and cheap shareware apps offer system monitoring (and more), and it’s available as an additional but secondary feature in the more comprehensive disk utilities, in my opinion Checkmate is overpriced by a factor of 3. Checkmate brings to bear exactly zero tools to fix any and all problems it might discover. It works just fine for me, now if Micromat will only update the UI, which is unnecessarily huge and in need of a refreshening.Ī $30 disk utility with very little real utility. Then again, I also don't know the purpose of half the electronics in a modern car, yet that lack of knowledge won't stop me from driving If I need to do so. How it does what it does? I know there's a daemon working in the background, but as for the particulars, I have no idea. Personally I prefer to know about problems before they escalate, because often in those early stages I find can make all the difference. You set Checkmate up, and it scans your computer at certain times, informing you what it has discovered. Nor do I see why that's particularly difficult to understand, and as to other applications with similar functionality, I know Drive Genius 4 has a similar function (but am unsure if it works in the same fashion) though I am unaware of any freeware or shareware apps with such a comprehensive feature set. It checks out things like volume structures, Memory, looks for I/O errors, SMART status and the partition map in an effort to detect minor problems before they become major ones. I don't at all understand all the ire directed at Checkmate, and not to start a debate, but what Checkmate does is very, very obvious. ![]()
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