SmartFTP 1.0.978 Official Release
Posted by Steven Parker on 11 July 2003 - 11:24 · 9 comments & 422 views
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#1 Posted by nookadum on 11 Jul 2003 - 12:42
- One of the best FTP clients out there.

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#2 Posted by nocture on 11 Jul 2003 - 12:48
- indeed and its free

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(1 reply)
#3 Posted by antareus on 11 Jul 2003 - 15:10
- Wow, the first app I've seen with IPv6 support.
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#4 Posted by DJ Prem on 11 Jul 2003 - 15:44
- Slick.....
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#5 Posted by Caleb on 11 Jul 2003 - 18:44
- You're welcome Neobond
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#6 Posted by Zero1 on 12 Jul 2003 - 21:09
- i posted this 3 days ago in BPN :|
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#7 Posted by Cryton on 12 Jul 2003 - 22:42
- i love filezilla. opensource and free, and filezilla ftp server is awesome for setting up ftp servers quickly.
God bless you, filezilla. http://sourceforge.net/projects/filezilla
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#8 Posted by OptiPlex on 14 Jul 2003 - 03:13
- Are there any mirror sites? Right now, I'm only pulling 5KB off their server
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What's New:
- Full IPv6 Support
- Protocol Family Preference
- NOTE: Enter [ip] for IPv6 ip
- Fixed serious bugs causing instability
- Fixed mem leaks with "Statistics" window on Win9x
- Maximized upload speed
This version is recommended since a very MAJOR bug was fixed that caused alot of crashes with earlier versions.Major Stability and Performance Improvements
Users now typically store company passwords on their handheld devices as well as their own personal data such as bank and credit card details. A quarter of users said they also downloaded corporate data.
But 73 per cent of companies have no specific security policy for mobile devices, Pointsec said.
According to the Office of the Information Commissioner (OIC), the responsibility for securing data lies with businesses, regardless of whether devices are personally owned or bought by the company for business use.
"The responsibility for securing data lies with the company under the seventh principle of the Data Protection Act," an OIC spokeswoman said.
"This says companies must ensure that there are appropriate technologies and procedures in place such as encryption and passwords to protect data.
"A person whose data was inappropriately retrieved if a PDA was stolen could have the right to claim compensation."
Although there are no official statistics, the Pointsec survey shows a potentially serious problem for companies.
"While we haven't seen any high-profile cases, if a doctor or social worker or a high-ranking executive in a bank has their PDA stolen, someone is going to sue an organisation," Magnus Ahlberg, managing director at Pointsec, told vnunet.com.
"The Data Protection Act states that the company or IT manager is responsible for the protection of information. There is also the risk of industrial espionage."
Even simple security measures such as ensuring the devices are password protected are ignored, according to Ahlberg.
"It is still a reasonably immature technology. There are trials of encryption software underway, but it is still in the early stages and there is a long way to go," he said.