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Yummy ftp pro app store no longer available
Yummy ftp pro app store no longer available












yummy ftp pro app store no longer available
  1. YUMMY FTP PRO APP STORE NO LONGER AVAILABLE UPDATE
  2. YUMMY FTP PRO APP STORE NO LONGER AVAILABLE ARCHIVE
  3. YUMMY FTP PRO APP STORE NO LONGER AVAILABLE FULL
  4. YUMMY FTP PRO APP STORE NO LONGER AVAILABLE SOFTWARE

A 9to5Mac reader told us that he contacted Apple support to ask about the app, but not even the support agent could explain what happened. That doesn’t come as a surprise since Apple has added the Remote feature built into the Control Center in iOS 12, so Apple TV users can have access to all the controls on Siri Remote without having to download any app.ĩto5Mac found that Apple has also removed almost all references to the Apple TV Remote app, suggesting that the company has in fact discontinued it. The app is no longer available for download from the App Store and Apple has likely discontinued it, which means that it will no longer get any updates. I’ve found it to be reliable, much more so than Transmit which is fickle in my experience, kind of boring even, which is what you want an FTP app to be.Apple today silently removed its “Apple TV Remote” app from the App Store, which lets users control the Apple TV from an iPhone or iPad simulating a real Remote. On topic a bit, I’ve come to rely on the ridiculously named Yummy FTP Pro having owned both Fetch (which I must check out again) and Transmit. He’s even got his own domain mapped to it. My son has a CC account and Adobe includes a website where you can create a portfolio of your work as part of the subscription.

yummy ftp pro app store no longer available

Sure it’s just my JPEGs but a lot has to go wrong before it comes to that. I’ve got about 250,000 photos up there, it’s my fallback in the event of multiple backup failures, at least I’d have them.

yummy ftp pro app store no longer available

The pro version is 49 bucks a year, and is unlimited and can automatically upload the images on any drive or folder attached to your computer. It doesn’t process the image in any way (though has a built in web editor) unlike other ‘free’ providers, so what you upload is what is embedded. It only takes up image files, not raw data, but you’d only be embedding JPEGs anyway so not an issue. It automatically creates multiple sizes of your image file for embedding as appropriate when you want to.

YUMMY FTP PRO APP STORE NO LONGER AVAILABLE FULL

Full disclosure: the stuffed Fetch dog is an anachronism-it came many years after I wrote the book. File transfer apps may no longer be as essential as they were 10 or 20 years ago, but it’s still good to see Jim teaching an old dog new 64-bit tricks. It won’t be the long-anticipated Fetch 6, but just Fetch 5.8, and it’s only in beta testing now.

YUMMY FTP PRO APP STORE NO LONGER AVAILABLE UPDATE

Instead, he is now porting Fetch’s ancient Carbon code to Cocoa to create an update that will be able to run in macOS 10.15 Catalina. Along with file transfer apps becoming less necessary overall, he made the classic mistake of thinking it would be a good idea to rewrite Fetch’s code from scratch, a task that he proved incapable of completing. In the post, Jim talks bluntly about why Fetch has faded from view over the past decade. (Peter Lewis’s Anarchie, later called Interarchy, which became Fetch’s primary competition in later years, didn’t ship until 1994.) It was nice to be reminded of other early FTP apps too, like the FTP client that Amanda Walker built into the integrated Internet app TCP/Connect and HyperFTP from Doug Hornig at Cornell. In fact, the book announcement-“ Administrivia” (13 September 1993)-was the first mention of Fetch in TidBITS as well. I don’t remember my earliest history with Fetch, but when I wrote Internet Starter Kit for Macintosh in 1993, it was my favorite FTP client and I was able to bundle it with the book. Jim Matthews, author of Fetch, has penned a blog post that looks back at the file transfer app’s 30-year history, starting with the release of 1.0 on 1 September 1989.

  • #1624: Important OS security updates, rescuing QuickTake 150 photos, AirTag alerts while traveling.
  • #1625: Apple's "Far Out" event, the future of FileMaker, free NMUG membership, Quick Note and tags in Notes, Plex suffers data breach.
  • YUMMY FTP PRO APP STORE NO LONGER AVAILABLE SOFTWARE

    #1626: AirTag replacement battery gotcha, Kindle Kids software flaws, iOS 12.5.6 security fix.

    YUMMY FTP PRO APP STORE NO LONGER AVAILABLE ARCHIVE

    #1627: iPhone 14 lineup, Apple Watch SE/Series 8/Ultra, new AirPods Pro, iOS 16 and watchOS 9 released, Steve Jobs Archive.#1628: iPhone 14 impressions, Dark Sky end-of-life, tales from Rogue Amoeba.














    Yummy ftp pro app store no longer available