![]() The recipient just opens Warp, clicks “receive”, punches in the code and… et voila: digital transference through the binary ether. Just open Warp, select the file to “send”, and copy the shareable code it generates. ![]() The extra-LAN capability makes Warp the ideal tool to reach for when you want to share a file with friend/colleague but don’t want to go through the predictable hassle of uploading it to a cloud-based service, generating a shareable link, sharing the link, them complaining the link doesn’t work, you having to check again… and so on. Or to quote the Warp page on Flathub: “Warp allows you to securely send files to each other via the internet or local network by exchanging a word-based code.” Yet Warp does something that tools I’ve written about in the past, like Linux Mint’s (terrific) Warpinator, don’t: it lets you send files outside of your local network. Not that user-friendly file transfer apps are unique or exclusive to Linux. ![]() Warp is a simple, no-fuss file transfer app for Linux desktops.īuilt in GTK4, Warp offers the sort of clean, focused UI we more commonly associate with Mac apps than Linux ones.
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