Happy Holidays! From South River Technologies Tags: activate, activation portal, license, manage licenses, registration codeĬomments: Comments Off on Managing License Activations Using the Portal you have the ability to view your current activations, download the list of activations in XML format, deactivate one (or all) computer activations, edit the customer registration information for the registration code, and manage any SRT email mailing list subscriptions.Ĭategories: GroupDrive, South River Technologies, Titan FTP Server, WebDrive SRT has set up a Customer Activation Portal where an end user may manage the activations on a given registration code. Multi-seat WebDrive licenses can be installed on multiple systems, server products can be installed on a single computer. The registration code purchased determines how many times the software may be simultaneously activated. Once a registration code is purchased and entered into the program (eliminating the annoying nag screens), the program is activated. Of course, it’s our preference that you will decide to move ahead with the purchase. This feature permits a potential customer to run the application in their environment for a while to determine if it meets the requirements.Īs is the case with most trials, it all comes to an end at some point and the software must be either purchased, or removed from your system. SRT’s Titan Editions support FTP, SFTP, and FTPS.Īll of South River Technologies applications include a feature that permits them to run in trial mode for a specified number of days. WebDrive is now available as a Mac OSX FTP, SFTP and WebDAV Client. WebDrive also supports SFTP and Amazon S3. WebDrive can be used as a WebDAV Client to map a drive letter to WebDAV servers, including Sharepoint. SRT’s WebDrive, often used as an FTP client, supports a variety of protocols. Unlike the WebDAV protocol, FTP does not support automatic file locking, which can lead to users accessing the same file and potentially overwriting changes made to that file by the initial user. The FTP protocol supports two modes of data transfer, plain text and binary, and usually defaults to plain text. The protocol has been around since the 1990’s. SFTP runs over an SSH session, usually on TCP port 22. The acronym stands for SSH File Transfer Protocol. SFTP – another file transfer protocol that has nothing to do with FTP. It is often called Secure FTP and runs over TCP port 21 or 990. It usually runs over TCP port 21, and is not secure.įTPS – which stands for FTP over TLS/SSL. There are several file transfer protocols available:įTP – the plain FTP protocol, which has been around since the 1970’s. There are also public FTP archives that follow a special convention that accepts a username of “anonymous”. To connect to an FTP server, the client typically requires a username and password. Once a connection is established, the client can send and receive copies of files. An FTP client program initiates a connection to a remote computer running FTP server software. FTP service is based on a client/server architecture. WebDAV also supports XML properties so users can access data about the file, the author, the date the file was modified and namespace manipulation, which allows resources to be copied or moved.įile Transfer Protocol (FTP) is a simple network protocol based on IP, which allows users to transfer files between computers on the Internet. One of the major features in WebDAV is the ability to lock files automatically to prevent data being overwritten by another user. Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV), by definition, is a set of extensions to the HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol), which allows users to edit and manage files collaboratively on remote Web servers. Since SRT’s products support both WebDAV and FTP, I thought it would be a good topic to cover in this week’s blog. In many conversations with our customers, I often run into a common question: “What’s the difference between WebDAV and FTP?” There seems to be confusion about the differences between the two protocols.
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