File managers and SSH clients

FreeCommander: A File Manager for Windows That Doesn’t Pretend to Be Flashy Windows Explorer works — until it doesn’t. You open ten folders, try to compare two directories, move 200 files while searching for duplicates, and suddenly it’s all clicks, tabs, and context menus. That’s where FreeCommander steps in — not to dazzle, but to get things done. It’s a dual-pane file manager, old-school in spirit, but polished where it matters. Built for people who move files by the hundreds, rename in batch

KiTTY: The PuTTY Fork That Does More Than Just SSH PuTTY is great — until you realize how many tiny things it doesn’t do. KiTTY steps in to fix that. It’s a fork of PuTTY with a long list of extras that make terminal work on Windows faster, cleaner, and less frustrating. Still lightweight. Still portable. Still familiar. But with session filtering, local scripts, launcher options, and features that save time when you’re juggling multiple SSH sessions every day.

muCommander: Cross-Platform File Manager with a Classic Feel If you’ve ever used Norton Commander, Total Commander, or even Midnight Commander, you’ll feel right at home with muCommander. It’s a lightweight, dual-pane file manager written in Java — so it runs just about anywhere: Windows, macOS, Linux, BSD. It doesn’t try to reinvent the file manager. Instead, it delivers something simple and predictable: copy, move, compare, archive, mount remote shares — all from a clean, keyboard-friendly int

Cyberduck: A GUI File Transfer Tool That Handles Servers and Clouds Equally Well Some tools are made for developers. Others for sysadmins. Cyberduck feels like it was built for both — and somehow still works for everyone else, too. It’s a graphical file transfer client for Windows and macOS that supports just about every protocol you might need: FTP, SFTP, WebDAV, Amazon S3, Backblaze B2, Google Cloud, Azure, and more. It looks like a basic file browser, but behind the clean interface is a lot o

Submit your application