6/21/2023 0 Comments Teracopy review– Through shell integration, it completely replaces Windows Explorer copy and move functions. – Small utility with very simple install process. Here, you can tweak a few aspects of TeraCopy such as enable/disable the program as the default copy handler, add to Explorer context menu, change the language and the progress bar colors, and various file transfer related options, such as check free space and audio notification at transfer completion. The program’s settings reside under the Preferences options located in the Menu function. Returning to the main GUI the default functions resume, skip and cancel are also present along with the clean up, verify, delete (for source files) and menu options located at the bottom of the extended UI. From here you can select the file transfer mode (move or copy), add the files to TeraCopy, test them and permanently delete them from disk. As TeraCopy benefits of Windows Explorer integration, the menu that appears when right-clicking on a file also includes an option with the program’s name that opens an additional interface. If you choose to start a file transfer from within the interface instead of using cut/copy/paste in Windows Explorer, the “Copy to” and “Move to” options will be enabled (by default these are grayed out). Right below the first progress bar there are several buttons that you can enable/disable for system shutdown, eject drive, run test and close window after transfer completion. The button titled More/Less allows you to switch between view modes. The essential layout displays two progress bars: one for the file that is currently copied and another for the destination. It also comes with an essential and an extended mode that provides additional information and options. The interface is very simple and you’ll have absolutely no problems using it, even the first time. Of course you can always open it like you do with any other application and deploy the file copy/move process from there. Since TeraCopy actually replaces the cut/copy/paste functions in Windows Explorer, so the program’s interface pops up every time you perform a file transfer operation. TeraCopy works on Windows XP, 2000, Vista and 7, with no additional hardware requirements, which was to be expected from such a lightweight utility. Even if TeraCopy is free for non-commercial use, the installation doesn’t contain any form of adware. The install process is very fast with only a few configuration options, namely the install folder’s path and creating a desktop icon and associations with. TeraCopy’s capabilities are definitely not revealed by the setup file’s size, which is less than 3 MB large.
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