A modern file manager that pushes the boundaries of the platform. Branches Tags. Could not load branches. Could not load tags. Latest commit. Fixed AppCenter initialization Git stats 3, commits. Failed to load latest commit information.
Simplified the readme file Jan 11, Add running interaction tests as part of CI Jan 13, Bump Axe. Windows from 1. Fixed "divide by zero" error thrown upon navigation to some directori…. May 30, LinShare is aimed at businesses of varying sizes. It's flexible, self-hosted, and is a solid alternative to proprietary applications like Dropbox and Box especially if you need a few more functions from your file sharing tool.
Those features include secure uploads from people outside of your organization, a Thunderbird plugin that lets you share attachments from within the email client, and the ability to securely share files while you're uploading them to LinShare. You can download LinShare's components to your server, or use a Docker image to install it.
Like LinShare, the main audience for ProjectSend is businesses. That doesn't just mean large organizations. Smaller shops and even non-profits can benefit from using ProjectSend too. ProjectSend is self-hosted, which means you're responsible for securing the server it runs on. That also gives you control over whatever's uploaded to the application. ProjectSend's core features include the ability to share files with individuals or groups and the ability for those individuals or groups to upload files to a folder assigned to only them.
You can download ProjectSend from the application's website, or test drive it. Be warned: for security reasons, you can't upload files to the demo site.
If the four file-sharing tools I've looked at in this article aren't what you're looking for, take a look at:. Do you have a favorite open source tool for sharing files?
Feel free to tell our community about it by leaving a comment. This is great. Working in graphic arts requires transferring files all the time. I am looking into YouTransfer, which you mention, and that may be a good alternative I could start using and share with my co-workers. Thanks for the post. Let's look at four open source tools that can meet all of your file sharing needs. Image by :. Get the highlights in your inbox every week.
The best part of the Files app is that it is a tabbed file manager. Right-click on a tab in the tab bar to move it to a new window, duplicate the tab or to open a new tab. I clicked the words "New Tab" on the main screen, until I realized it is actually the address bar. In my opinion, it should read "Home" to avoid the confusion. There are three columns that you can toggle: Date Modified, Type and Size. The file copy paste operations have a minor issue. If a file already exists, the program offers to generate a new name or replace the existing one.
But there is no "replace all" button, which makes it a bit annoying if you're pasting several files. Files has a proper right-click menu with many options, including a Copy Location menu item. The program does not come with a built-in file extractor, and relies on Explorer's archiver for ZIP files. The context menu has an animation for sub-menus, which make them appear after a slight delay and fall like a window curtain. Click on the Settings button in the bottom right corner to access Files' options.
The app has a Dark theme and a Light theme, both of which look well-designed. Set the starting page of the file manager from the "On Startup" tab, you can choose from opening a new tab, restore the previous session, or open a custom directory. Head to the multitasking view to adjust the layout resizing settings. More importantly, this section has an option to toggle Dual Pane View.
This is disabled by default, as is the option that opens new tabs in Dual Pane View. Enable both settings, go to the main screen and open a new tab, and you can use Files in Dual Pane View. I tested it on Windows 10 The program was in beta for a long time before it graduated to version 1.
I also found the browsing experience slower than Windows Explorer, probably due to the CPU stutters, especially when browsing large directories. If you're looking for a Total Commander alternative, give File Commander a shot, it's open source and light on resources.
Run this:. By using all their Windows 10 current apps, we already know how awful it will be. Freezing at splash screen, fails to open randomly, very slow, memory leaks, all the functionality of file explorer will be missing, looks like it was designed for smartphones only, everything is a single color.
Please god no. Current file explorer is perfectly fine. Not for me. Everything is in details list view. Useless imo. This is not true. There are view options in the lower right.
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