Filed under: Utilities, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Productivity, Freeware, Open Source
MuCommander is a powerful, cross-platform file manager
We've covered many, many Explorer replacements here in the past, so I was a little surprised that MuCommander hadn't been written up yet.
What makes MuCommander stand out is that it is free, open source, and cross-platform. The author's web site provides downloads for Windows, Mac, and Linux (.tar.gz) as well as a Debian package, portable version, and a Java Web Start package.
It's actually the first JWS application I've come across since I started reviewing for Download Squad. It loaded fairly quickly on my netbook, and ridiculously fast on my quad-core AMD desktop.
MuCommander presents a skinnable, dual-pane view for file management. There's no tab support, though I don't consider that a major shortcoming - especially considering its other features are numerous, and extremely useful.
For starters, there's built-in support for FTP, SFTP, Samba, HTTP, NFS, and Bonjour. Several types of archives can be explored without extracting: zip, rar, tar, gzip, bzip2, iso, nrg, deb, and lst. MuCommander can create archives (press ctrl+I to pack) and even modify zip files on the fly without having to recompress the entire archive
There's also a command shell window with scrolling output, credential manager, and favorite locations list.
MuCommander is a fantastic file manager, and well worth a test drive for any user - regardless of OS.


What's one of the worst things about Windows? The explorer function to find folders, documents, and pictures of your cat doing funny things.
File copying between computers or even folders on a local system can sometimes be a bit of a pain. File sizes seem to be getting bigger, and the number of files we want to be moving around seems to be growing as well. 

After spending the better part of an hour on 