G Guest Dec 17, 2005 #1 I used to have Wise FTP as my FTP. Are there any other free ones out there that are just as good if not easier to use? Thanks
I used to have Wise FTP as my FTP. Are there any other free ones out there that are just as good if not easier to use? Thanks
P Paul Smith Dec 17, 2005 #2 Vidmaker said: I used to have Wise FTP as my FTP. Are there any other free ones out there that are just as good if not easier to use? Thanks Click to expand... I use SmartFTP, which I quite like although it is Shareware, so you're suppose to register it. -- Paul Smith, Yeovil, UK. http://www.windowsresource.net/ http://www.xbox360degrees.com/ *Remove 'nospam.' to reply by e-mail*
Vidmaker said: I used to have Wise FTP as my FTP. Are there any other free ones out there that are just as good if not easier to use? Thanks Click to expand... I use SmartFTP, which I quite like although it is Shareware, so you're suppose to register it. -- Paul Smith, Yeovil, UK. http://www.windowsresource.net/ http://www.xbox360degrees.com/ *Remove 'nospam.' to reply by e-mail*
R Richard Crowley Dec 17, 2005 #3 I used to have Wise FTP as my FTP. Are there any other free ones out there that are just as good if not easier to use? Click to expand... MS Windows has built-in FTP functionality. I used to try the various free ones, but found that the built-in ones were just as good (at least IMHO). You can type FTP at the C:>\ prompt command line and use all the standard FTP functions. Documentation of all the FTP commands is here... http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/ftp.mspx And you can also connect to an FTP server with a more graphical user interface using Windows Explorer if you type an FTP URL into the address bar. For example... ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/
I used to have Wise FTP as my FTP. Are there any other free ones out there that are just as good if not easier to use? Click to expand... MS Windows has built-in FTP functionality. I used to try the various free ones, but found that the built-in ones were just as good (at least IMHO). You can type FTP at the C:>\ prompt command line and use all the standard FTP functions. Documentation of all the FTP commands is here... http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/ftp.mspx And you can also connect to an FTP server with a more graphical user interface using Windows Explorer if you type an FTP URL into the address bar. For example... ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/