

- #TRANSMIT 4 FTP SERIAL NUMBER UPGRADE#
- #TRANSMIT 4 FTP SERIAL NUMBER FREE#
- #TRANSMIT 4 FTP SERIAL NUMBER WINDOWS#
I have some app for that on my iPad, I can’t remember what it is at the moment. I rarely do FTP on my iPad, and never on my iPhone.
#TRANSMIT 4 FTP SERIAL NUMBER WINDOWS#
It would be really complicated to do it with a couple of dozen Finder windows and dragging back and forth between there. Each server has different local and remote paths. The locals are on my computer and the remotes are there. I have a couple of dozen client servers with scripts on it. In my work flow the dual pane really makes things easier. It’s pretty easy to get directories and file paths with prompts to direct as neededand skip a GUI FTP client altogether. There’s nothing like a right-click to a menu command, or a Service (free builtin to macOS) or Macro in something like Keyboard Maestro, FastScripts (free with limits), etc., etc., which can be set to a keystroke or menubar itms or pallet items, to quickly select a Finder item(s) or open document (such as TextEdit, Preview, whatever) in your active application and send it to your desired server path. If you’re doing a lot of drag and drop, window to window, from your local device to your servers, maybe you should instead be looking at scripting and terminal? There’s also tons of ready-made scripts out there, easily customizable. Yes, the developer (Jason?) was super helpful and responsive.


I didn’t care as much for YummyFTP as I did YummyFTP Watch, and also being able to set up YummyFTP shortcuts for drag and drop for less-skilled clients/employees. Transmit iOS was (is still works on iOS 12) absolutely fantastic it worked well with Shortcuts (née Workflow), and played well with Dropbox, iCloud, et al and it synchronized nicely across platforms/devices.
#TRANSMIT 4 FTP SERIAL NUMBER FREE#
I only offer up CyberDuck because it’s so much more affordable, as it’s free or donationware and it’s “good enough” for most people. Sadly, they dropped AppleScript support many years ago, but you can still whip a little Keyboard Maestro to help manage/manipulate windows/connections, etc… Second, Cyberduck supports macOS Tabbed windows, so if you only want one window with all your connection instances, you can cycle through tabs as you like. Cyberduck will remember these windows and their positions between restarts, and so it’s just a question of training your brain s to what window connects to what instance. In the first case, you can open as many connections, including to different directories on the same server, or just different servers. As for having multiple servers open, with Cyberduck, I approach it in two ways, depending on the servers I’m accessing. You are correct that Cyberduck is not dual-pane, but I’m only excited by a dual-pane scenario when I’m trying to compare a local file set with a set on the server. I don’t see two separate options like that in Forklift though. In Transmit it is possible to have confirmations just for replacing local files when downloading, but always replace when uploading to a remote server.

But I don’t see something similar in Forklift. Is there a way of starting an FTP transfer other than dragging between panes in Forklift? In Transmit, I can customize the menu and add “transfer button” to click. I have this set in the preferences, but it often (not always) asks me to confirm. In Forklift it seems hard to avoid confirming an overwrite from local to remote each and every time. In Transmit local is always on the left and remote is always on the right, like I prefer. It could get easy to be mixed up in transfer direction this way. In Forklift I wonder if we can maintain the panes so that the left one is local and the right one is remote? Not always, but frequently, I’ll open a connection and they are switched and I have to swap.
#TRANSMIT 4 FTP SERIAL NUMBER UPGRADE#
There are some things I like about Transmit better than ForkLift, though Transmit is $45 and it will only cost me $20 to upgrade from my old Forklift license.
