

- #COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER MAC OS X#
- #COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER INSTALL#
- #COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER FULL#
- #COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER PORTABLE#
- #COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER SOFTWARE#
Ultracopier manages transfers of large quantities of folders and files, or huge-sized files in a much more reliable and efficient way than that standard Windows Explorer. This is why using a program like Ultracopier is such a great idea! Windows doesn't certainly stand out for its speed when copying or moving files. Ultracopier is used to replace the default dialog into windows for copy and move.
#COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER PORTABLE#
Have 32Bits, 64Bits and portable version.

Is helped with ultracopier project (more modern alternative). Main features include: play/pause, speed limitation, on-error resume, error/collision management.Ultracopier is written in delphi, with long standing code.

#COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER SOFTWARE#
Hope it helped :).Ultracopier is free and open source software licensed under GPL that acts as a replacement for files copy dialogs. Though it's not entirely helpful, but I guess, unless you have like a lot of partitions, this is one 'easier' way to do it. This way, you can easily copy a whole partition, but if you have few partitions, then you'll have to perform those steps to each one, separately and add them to the 'Queue'. After that, 'Ultracopier' will ask you to select the destination folder, then select where you want it to be copied and it will be added to the 'Copylist'. Just select the partition that you want fom the left and then click on the 'Open' button. Now, you can open a single partition from the dialog box that you get next. Under the 'Copylist' tab, click on the 'down arrow' with the 'plus (+)' sign and from the new menu choose 'open_folder'.ģ. Open 'Ultracopier' window and click on the 'More' button.Ģ. Well, there is no such option that lets you directly choose all the partitions at once in 'Ultracopier' (as far as I know).īut, if you haven't done already, you can try the following method:ġ. It has a separate zipped version (only for Windows) so you can use it as a portable app too.
#COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER INSTALL#
You can install UltraCopier in Ubuntu 12.04 Precise Pangolin, 11.10 Oneiric Ocelot, 11.04 Natty Narwhal, 10.10 and 10.04 by using the below command in your Terminal window.įor other OS users, please get it from this official UltraCopier home page. You can do a bit of a tweaking using the options window …

these are some of its main features to mention. Close to the system tray (can be disabled of course). Tries to read few times before giving up if a read error occurs. Enable/Disable keeping certain meta-data values such as “dates”. Lets you change priority level and the ‘block size’. Shows basic states of the file (percentage, progress bar, file name, speed, time left etc). If it encounters errors while copying then the partially copied file will be saved. Runs in the system notification area for easy access. You can add or remove files & folders to its queue for easily dealing with mass file operations. So whenever you want to copy or move a file, you’ll have to manually add them into UltraCopier. I don’t know how it’s under other OS platforms, but in Ubuntu it won’t however replace your file copy manager. In simple terms, the average speeds are way higher than shown in the image …) Although it wasn’t like stunningly fast but did a better job than than the built in tool (for the record: the speed reading in the screenshot is small but this is because it changes quite quickly and updates few times within a second.
#COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER MAC OS X#
It also supports Windows and Mac OS X too. So if you’re looking for a free an open source utility that you can use in Ubuntu then try ‘UltraCopier’.
#COMMENT UTILISER ULTRACOPIER FULL#
And in Ubuntu even if it couldn’t copy the full content of a file, it’ll still save the partially copied content where Windows would simply delete it.īut if you usually deal with a lot of mass file copying & moving operations then having a dedicated utility does makes sense as it lets you somewhat automate the task (by letting you add files to a queue for instance) and comes with additional features. When it comes with dealing with file copy & move operations in Ubuntu Linux the built in tool (Nautilus file manager) does a decent job.
