So basically the new app, converted the format of the files, so that the old app couldn’t read them any more? It simply should have imported the existing documents, leaving the older versions there for the user to delete if they choose to do so.
It is an open source FTP and SFTP, WebDAV, Cloud Files, Google Docs, and Amazon S3 client for Mac OS X and Windows.
Cyberduck is more then just a FTP client. For example: scp -i /Projects/keys/foo.pem. This is something that we as developers should pay attention to, so we don’t cause the same problem for our users. All other FTP clients such as Cyberduck, WinSCP, CoreFTP and SmartFTP (not free though) have this function built in, why can’t Filezilla have it Cyberduck. I'm trying to connect to a remote Ubuntu server.I can successfully connect to it using ssh and scp commands in the shell. Its going to take some work to recreate them from scratch if I cant restore some preferences file from a backup… I installed Mountain Duck as a trial, was not convinced I would use it, and deleted the app.īut it unregistered my existing Cyberduck app, and deleted all my bookmarks too… Historically Cyberduck was Mac only and Filezilla was Windows only, a few years ago both applications expanded their offerings so now they both work on both platforms.
Reminds me of the time I downloaded cracked versions of my software I found in one copy, the executable file was a whole 20mb bigger which suggests that the cracker had injected some other code in my app and probably to make it do nefarious things. For historical reasons Mac users are more likely to already have Cyberduck installed and Windows users are more likely to have Filezilla installed. It installs “Advanced Mac Cleaner” which took me forever to fully scrub from my system. POS installed all kinds of on my system WITHOUT admin privileges being expressly given.