![]() ![]() * deleted winscp.rnd from drive_c/users/un/Application Data/ * In the Prefix config / files - looked through the *.reg files. * Tried winebottle with both the standalone WinSCP and the WinSCP installer * runtime arg of /ini="C:\my_winscp_config.ini" * Clicking ok or close = X11 continues to run, but don't see the WinSCP executable * Definitely the WinSCP application and not from X11 itself Both Fugu and iHook tend to be on the ugly side though. Fugu doesn't really support either (though its counterpart iHook is supposed to handle the commands behavior). Editing temp files that upload on each save action is another biggie. ![]() But it's open source, so a Mac spawn of WinSCP could start there.Ĭustom commands are the big point of WinSCP for me. It's latest release is now 4 years old, and half the time it doesn't work right. Transmit is one of the better FTP clients on the Mac, yet it still does not support SCP/SSH. I've been doing some iPhone development, and could try taking on the project eventually, but probably not any time soon. I've considered building a Mac client like WinSCP, but it's a fairly huge endeavour. Commander OneĬommander One ranks with Path Finder as a fully-developed, mature Finder alternative. You’ll find dual pane browsing and a few advanced tools here, too, but in a simpler package. The many panes and windows are gone, and the user interface is trimmed down to focus on moving and copying files.Did you try FireFtp? It's a plug-in for Firefox (that means it's cross-platform).įireFTP is an FTP client, not an SCP/SSH client. You can even open a Terminal window in one of the panes for your on-the-spot command line needs. Slide up the extra panes on the bottom, and you can see detailed file info, attributes, hex code, preview data, permissions, and more. It will also tell you more than you ever wanted to know about your data. Path Finder brings a dual pane interface and dozens of advanced tools. It “replaces” Finder in the sense that, if you love Path Finder, you won’t need to use the vanilla Finder again. Instead, it runs simultaneously, providing advanced functionality and new tools in a different application. Path Finder doesn’t modify or replace the built-in Finder program. It might be called a “Finder replacement,” but that’s not as drastic as it sounds. ![]() Path Finder is the elder statesman of Finder alternative applications and my personal favorite. ![]()
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