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Browse free open source File Managers and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source File Managers by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

  • Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas Icon
    Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas

    Build gen AI apps with an all-in-one modern database: MongoDB Atlas

    MongoDB Atlas provides built-in vector search and a flexible document model so developers can build, scale, and run gen AI apps without stitching together multiple databases. From LLM integration to semantic search, Atlas simplifies your AI architecture—and it’s free to get started.
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  • Captain Compliance - Data Privacy and Compliance Software Icon
    Captain Compliance - Data Privacy and Compliance Software

    Privacy Compliance Software - Avoid Fines and Prevent Lawsuits

    Captain Compliance handles your data privacy requirements so you can be privacy compliant. No more compliance stress, stop stressing over regulatory risks – just privacy protection managed by experts. Our user-friendly platform backed by privacy professionals simplifies the process of navigating regulations, giving your customers transparent choices, and building essential trust for your organization.
    Learn More
  • 1
    Nueva versión con soporte para pseudo tmpfs. Ahora la cantidad de archivos copiados puede exceder la cantidad de RAM del sistema!!
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    fat_imgen

    fat_imgen

    FAT floppy image generator.

    fat_imgen is a utility you can use to create and modify FAT12 floppy images with.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3

    bootkernel

    Shell script to manage linux kernels in /boot directory

    Install, Accept, List, Remove and Set New, Current and Old linux kernels in the /boot directory. Inspired by the linux kernel "make install" target, and the /sbin/installkernel shell script. A profile "~/bootkernel.conf" or "/etc/bootkernel.conf" controls all aspects of bootkernel's behaviour - your chosen naming conventions, whether to maintain symbolic or hard links or neither, which filesystems (if any) need mounting and unmounting, and whether to delete redundant /lib/modules directories when removing the last corresponding kernel. "Install" copies kernel and other selected files to /boot, adding a ".new" extension. "Accept" moves current /boot files to ".old" extension, and moves those with ".new" to current, "List" shows all the kernels in /boot, marked as "new", "old", "current" and "executing" where applicable "Remove" deletes a specified kernel and associated files from /boot. "Set" modifies the targets of ".new" ".old" and the implicit .current links if any.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
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