![]() ![]() – A history panel with granular operation logging. – A ‘get info’ panel with full support for ownership and permissions management. – Native rsync protocol support (in addition to the current rsync-over-ssh). – (And works with any other service provider offering standard rsync-over-SSH.) – Filter any view of files and use the keyboard to navigate. – An ‘Open Terminal Here’ action to quickly jump into an SSH session in Terminal.app – pre-authenticated and ready in the right directory. – Use your SSH RSA private key instead of a password to connect to AWS, Google Cloud, etc. – Bonjour browsing to easily connect to servers found nearby. – Save multiple Favourites and work with multiple servers in multiple windows. – Fine tune custom preferences for each direction (upload/download) for each server. – Specify ‘initial paths’ – for connecting straight into the given directory. – Filter rules to include/exclude items based on text matching (or advanced pattern matching). Fuzzy matching means that even files that are non-identical can be used as a basis for boosting. – Enable ‘scavenging’: a preference to boost transfers by systematically employing rsync’s –copy-dest option essentially reusing data from existing files in recently-visited directories. – Autocompletion and inline documentation provided for each option. Even application-defined defaults can be overridden for a near-command-line level of control. – Advanced GUI controls to selectively tune over 125 other rsync options. – Push-update the remote system’s version of rsync (includes precompiled binaries to suit a variety of remote machines). – Checkboxes to quickly enable rsync’s most powerful features – such as backups/version-controlling, bandwidth-management, retention of partial transfers, etc. – Includes the latest rsync 3.1.3 (no command-line interaction required). – All traffic sent over a securely encrypted SSH tunnel (no setup required). In particular, there are three instances when an overreliance on multiples can contribute to poor strategic decisions in capital allocation: (1) prioritizing multiples when investments at a lower multiple could generate more value (2) ignoring the interplay between multiples, returns on capital, and cost of capital when allocating capital to a noncore business and (3) extrapolating from a. – Browse, rename, copy, move, create and delete remote files. – Upload and download via rsync by dragging-and-dropping. ![]()
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