Rclone

Rclone

Rclone — rsync’s Cloud-Savvy Cousin If you’ve ever wished that rsync could talk to Google Drive, S3, or even Dropbox, that’s pretty much what Rclone does. It’s a single binary that knows how to move files between your machine and more than seventy different storage systems — from the big cloud vendors to smaller self-hosted setups like Nextcloud. Admins often treat it as a “glue tool”: one script with Rclone can copy data to the cloud at night, mount an S3 bucket as a local drive in the morning,

SSHFS-Win

SSHFS-Win

Bitvise SSH Client — Secure Remote Access for Windows Without the Extra Fuss For anyone managing Linux or network devices from Windows, Bitvise SSH Client tends to sneak into the toolbox and stay there. It’s not just a terminal — it’s an SSH connection manager, SFTP file browser, and tunneling tool, all in one lightweight package. No external dependencies, no setup gymnastics. You install it, add a profile, and you’re working. Short take

One Commander

One Commander

One Commander — Modern File Manager for Windows with a Fresh Look One Commander takes the classic dual-pane file manager idea and gives it a modern interface. Unlike the heavy, utilitarian feel of older tools, it opts for a clean Fluent-style design, with tabs, columns, and themes that look at home on Windows 10/11. But it’s not just looks: there’s a strong focus on navigation speed, quick file previews, and workflows that cut down clicks. How it works day-to-day

PeaZip

PeaZip

PeaZip — An Archiver That Doubles as a File Manager Some archivers are locked into their own formats. PeaZip takes the opposite route: it’s open source, runs on Windows and Linux, and happily works with more than two hundred archive types. On the surface it’s a compression tool, but in practice you can use it like a small file manager — two panes, tabs, previews, drag-and-drop. What daily use feels like

Multi Commander

Multi Commander

Multi Commander — Dual-Pane File Manager with a Plugin Mindset Multi Commander is one of those Windows file managers that’s happiest in the hands of people who like to tinker. Out of the box, it’s a clean dual-pane layout — source on one side, destination on the other — with familiar F-key shortcuts borrowed from the Norton/Total Commander lineage. But most of its strength comes from modules and plugins that let you bend it to your workflow. It’s free, portable-friendly, and just as comfortable

My Commander

My Commander

Краткое описание программы My Commander

Nemo

Nemo

Nemo — The Cinnamon Desktop File Manager Nemo is the default file manager for the Cinnamon desktop, best known from Linux Mint. At first glance it feels like a straightforward, modern file browser — single window, familiar icons, and a sidebar for places and mounts. But it’s built with power in mind: tabs, dual-pane mode, and bulk file operations that make it more than just a “click and open” tool. Unlike some minimal file managers, Nemo doesn’t shy away from extra features if they improve daily

Midnight Commander (mc)

Midnight Commander

Midnight Commander (mc) — A Console File Manager That Never Really Went Away Midnight Commander — usually just called mc — has been a constant presence on Linux and UNIX systems for decades. It’s a text-based, dual-pane file manager that runs inside a terminal, which means it works the same whether you’re sitting at the machine or SSH’d into it from halfway across the world. It borrows the muscle memory from old Norton Commander layouts — function keys along the bottom, panels for source and des

MobaXterm

MobaXterm

MobaXterm — A Swiss Army Knife Terminal for Windows There’s no shortage of SSH clients for Windows, but MobaXterm has a way of bundling everything into one package without feeling bloated. You open it for a quick terminal session, and before you know it, you’re using it to transfer files, tunnel ports, or run graphical apps from a remote Linux box — all without juggling separate tools. It’s aimed squarely at people who jump between systems all day: sysadmins, network engineers, developers. Every

FlashFXP

FlashFXP

FlashFXP — An FTP Client Built for People Who Actually Move Data Some tools are designed to look good in screenshots; FlashFXP isn’t one of them. It’s a Windows-only FTP/FTPS/SFTP client that’s been around for decades, quietly serving admins, web hosts, and anyone moving gigabytes between servers. The interface is old-school: two panes, clear file lists, and nothing hidden behind “modern” mystery menus. One local folder, one remote folder — or, if needed, two different servers talking directly t

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