Полное описание программы My Commander будет добавлено позже.
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Краткое описание программы My Commander
Полное описание программы My Commander будет добавлено позже.
trolCommander — A Fork of muCommander with a Classic Touch trolCommander is a cross-platform, dual-pane file manager that started life as a fork of muCommander. The idea was simple: keep the lightweight feel but add fixes and improvements that the original project wasn’t shipping fast enough. It runs on Java, so it works on Windows, macOS, and Linux alike. What using it feels like
muCommander — A Consistent File Manager Across All Your Systems Some tools don’t try to reinvent the wheel — they just make sure it rolls the same way everywhere. muCommander is one of them. It’s a small, dual-pane file manager that runs on pretty much anything with Java: Windows, macOS, Linux, BSD. No surprises, no big installer footprint, just a familiar interface with enough extras to make file work faster. Whether it’s pulling logs over SFTP, unpacking archives, or digging through SMB shares
fman — Stripped-Down File Manager with Plugins At first glance, fman looks almost too empty. Two panes, nothing more. No ribbons, no icons everywhere. Some people find it bare; others love that it gets out of the way. It feels closer to an old Commander clone, but with a modern twist — you can extend it in Python. What using it is like
At first glance, the tabs make life easier — switching between ten folders feels more like using a browser than a file manager. Then you notice the search: it’s fast, it digs deep, and it filters by size, date, attributes, whatever you need. Handy when you’re staring at gigabytes of logs.
Another small win is scripting. Nothing crazy, but good enough to batch rename, move files by pattern, or clean up backups. Some users write tiny scripts that save hours over time.
Wyns SSH Box — A Lightweight SSH Client for Windows Wyns SSH Box is a small Windows tool built for one thing: making SSH access straightforward without the clutter of full-blown terminal suites. It doesn’t try to compete with enterprise-grade managers. Instead, it aims to be portable, fast to start, and comfortable for people who just need a secure connection now and then. What using it feels like
WinSCP — The Admin’s Everyday Transfer Tool When someone on Windows needs to move files over SSH, the first name that usually comes up is WinSCP. It’s been around for years, and while the interface hasn’t changed much, people keep it because it’s steady and predictable. Instead of wrestling with command-line syntax, you get a simple two-pane window: local stuff on one side, remote server on the other. How it ends up being used