

(Yes, both Fetch and LeechFTP did this, FTP can sometimes have one file end transfer prematurely for some strange reason when doing a mass download). The ability to retry multiple failed downloads in the queue and resume from the failure point.The ability to resume downloads instead of starting from scratch.Some FTP servers limit the number of logins/sessions/download slots and this gives you an extra slot. (optional) the ability to use that slot normally used for browsing directories for downloading by pushing a button (both Fetch (3.0 and later) and LeechFTP had this option).The ability to keep browsing the FTP archive while downloading.The ability to save "bookmarks" or the equivalent with folder paths and a username.The ability to add either an entire folder which the program will dive into and download the entire contents including sub-folders, or individual files to the queue.I don't want it trying to download all 25 files I queue in parallel. The ability to queue up downloads and download them 1-3 at a time and ONLY 1-3 at a time.Free, there have always been good free FTP clients.I used to use a similar program called Fetch on the Mac, but that was pre-Mac OS X.Īccording to a quick Google Search, Fetch is still around.
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I'd recommend it for Windows 95-Windows 7 however. I've been using LeechFTP for almost 20 years, but it's ancient, hasn't been updated since before XP came out, and doesn't seem to work right on Windows 10. I just found that Firefox has disabled FTP, something I wasn't expecting until July, but should have done this research last year.ĭoes anyone have a suggestion for a good FTP client for Windows 10?
