Deltopia In the News
DeltaWalker - one of the most cleverly designed comparison applications 
that I've ever seen.

Erik Vlietinck, publisher of IT Enquirer - one of the most important
online information resources for cross media publishers - took DeltaWalker 
for a spin in August 2010. Here are just some of his impressions:

DeltaWaker is more than just an explorer of differences. While you can 
use the application just for that purpose - as I've shown in the screencast 
the program is extremely powerful in that respect - it can do a lot more. 
You can actually use DeltaWalker to edit the files under scrutiny, or to 
fully synchronize them.

At the end of about four weeks of using DeltaWalker occasionally, 
I came to the conclusion it's an incredibly powerful and flexible 
application that is quite easy to use, at least for simple 2-way comparisons. 
Erik Vlietinck, 
Aug 30, 2010.

I finally broke down and looked harder, and found an amazing tool, 
DeltaWalker, that seems as though it were designed for exactly the nightmare I faced.

Tim Jarrett - a software product manager and a veteran blogger - 
created a big mess on his outboard media drive with iTunes, while 
trying to consolidate all his music onto a new 1TB drive. 
Then... he found DeltaWalker:

I finally broke down and looked harder, and found an amazing tool, 
DeltaWalker, that seems as though it were designed for exactly the nightmare I faced. 
Point it at a pair of directories and it will highlight all the differences 
between them-missing subdirectories on one side or the other, or subdirectories 
whose contents are different in the two different locations. 
You can filter the output, too, so that you only have to see the differences 
that you care about (I didn't need to know how many folders were in my target
 directory and not my source). And when you find files that have to come over, 
it's a button click to make the move.
Once I found DeltaWalker, it took only about an hour to finish cleaning up 
the mess that I had started over six months before. It's an awesome tool, 
and one I can't believe I had never seen before. 
Tim Jarrett, 
Aug 3, 2010. 