The Unarchiver: 4.3.4

: Newer versions (4.3.5 and beyond) eventually introduced native support for Apple M1 chips and optimized performance for macOS Big Sur . How to Use the Current Version

The Unarchiver has long been the primary alternative to the native Apple Archive Utility because it supports "infinitely more" formats, ranging from modern and 7-Zip to obscure legacy types like StuffIt , DiskDoubler , and even Windows .EXE installers .

: Maintained compatibility for older systems, requiring macOS 10.13 High Sierra or later to function. The Unarchiver 4.3.4

While 4.3.4 was a minor iteration, it sat within a broader timeline of significant changes:

Version 4.3.4 specifically continued the app's mission to "stay out of your way". Its primary contributions included: : Newer versions (4

: The Unarchiver was originally developed by Dag Agren but was later acquired by MacPaw . This transition brought more regular updates but also introduced minor controversies, such as the inclusion of post-extraction "suggested apps" that some long-time users felt disrupted the app's minimalist history.

: Ensured that extraction remained a seamless "double-click" experience, handling filename encodings from around the world to prevent garbled text. The Evolution of the Tool While 4

: Fixed minor bugs and known crashes that could occur when processing corrupted or complex archive files.