It’s very comfortable and it fits perfectly in my workflow, which is good. Honestly, even though I’ve been using and loving Cyberduck for years now, I decided to stick with the two columns layout because it gives me a better overview of what a) I want to do locally and b) where I have to upload my local files. If you come from another context like, say, Interarchy or Cyberduck you can switch to a single window layout by pressing a button in the toolbar or selecting View > Show One File Browser.
![interarchy plugins interarchy plugins](https://www.bbvaapimarket.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/bbva-open4u-sus-caracteristicas-768x480.png)
The layout here, and in the rest of the app as well, is a two columns one, with your local files on the left and the actual connection on the right. The main screen of the app is the Favorites section, where you can indeed add some favorite connections, those that you think will use more frequently than others. Transmit 4 allows you to connect to FTP, SFTP, S3 and WebDAV servers but I’ve only tested FTP and Amazon S3 access so far, so if you have thoughts and feedbacks about the other ones feel free to drop a comment below. It’s one of those applications you can’t really understand and appreciate until you try it, and I hope the screenshots in this review will help you in getting a fair visual overview of what Transmit 4 looks like. I can say right now that Transmit 4 is the app that should win an ADA this year, without any doubt. I don’t think I’ve seen such a great looking piece of software gracing my Mac recently.
#INTERARCHY PLUGINS FULL#
It’s beautiful, it’s full of details to the last pixel, it’s intuitive. I say almost because perfection doesn’t exist, so my almost is a symptom of something that truly stands out and, basically, has no competitors. Let’s talk about the interface and forget about it: Transmit 4 is almost perfect. But delving deeper into it, there’s so much more to talk about.
#INTERARCHY PLUGINS FOR MAC OS#
Put simply, Panic has just released the ultimate file transfer app for Mac OS X. It’s quite difficult to approach Transmit 4, the latest release from Panic, considering that is an application that comes with an immense amount of hype, possibilities and commands, being specifically meant for people who do file transfers like they drink water. I think that an app meant of power users doesn’t have to exclude a great Mac-like UI design from its list of features- it’s the contrary: a full featured and complex app should find the right compromise between design and features.
![interarchy plugins interarchy plugins](https://www.kevinmuldoon.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/fugu.png)
Some people seem to think that a good FTP client is that app that comes with hundreds of features and doesn’t care about design principles and good practices just because it has to be functional, and functionality doesn’t play well with the eye candy.
![interarchy plugins interarchy plugins](https://www.kevinmuldoon.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/forklift.png)
We’ve gotten used to think that FTP applications should be simple, highly functional and powered by outdated and ugly user interfaces.