- Alternatives to Interarchy for Windows, Mac, Linux, BSD, Xfce and more. Filter by license to discover only free or Open Source alternatives. This list contains a total of 25+ apps similar to Interarchy. List updated: 1/30/2020 12:35:00 PM.
- The sweetest Image Compression App on the Mac. Squash was built exclusively for the Mac, that’s why it’s fast, fun, and powerful. Optimising the file size.
Developer(s) | Nolobe |
---|---|
Stable release | |
Operating system | macOS |
Type | FTP client |
License | Proprietary |
Website | interarchy.com |
Interarchy For Macbook Air
Interarchy is a FTP client for macOS supporting FTP, SFTP, SCP, WebDAV and Amazon S3. It is made by Nolobe and supports many advanced features for transferring, syncing and managing files over the Internet.
Let Keyboard Maestro take the frustration out of using a Mac and make your life more pleasant and efficient. Keyboard Maestro 9 includes Dark Mode support in Mojava/Catalina, JSON and OCR support, more triggers, more actions, more performance, more control. If you can perform it manually, Keyboard Maestro can almost certainly automate it for you. Interarchy is a powerful and flexible Internet interface for Mac OS. It can transfer files via FTP and HTTP, search the Internet to find the files you want, provide a wealth of information about remote servers as well as your local Internet connection and Internet applications, help manage remote servers, let you remotely control and test your Macintosh across the Internet.
Interarchy was created by Mac programmer Peter N Lewis in 1993 for MacintoshSystem 7.[1] Lewis went on to form Stairways Software in 1995 to continue development of Interarchy. In 2007 Lewis sold Interarchy to Matthew Drayton of Nolobe who continues to develop Interarchy to this day.[2] Drayton was an employee of Stairways Software having worked as a developer of Interarchy alongside Lewis since 2001.
Interarchy was originally called Anarchie because it was 'an Archie' client. The name was changed to Interarchy in 2000 due to a conflict with a cybersquatter.[3]
See also[edit]
Interarchy For Mac Pro
References[edit]
- ^Adam C. Engst (1994-01-31). 'Anarchie Rules'. Tidbits.
- ^John Gruber (2007-02-01). 'Interarchy Interview: Peter N Lewis and Matthew Drayton'. Daring Fireball.
- ^Adam C. Engst (2000-08-21). 'Anarchie Updated, Renamed to Interarchy 3.8'. Tidbits.