

Finally, the new Files app in iOS 10 overlaps a lot of file-management functionality Transmit provides, and feels like a more natural place for that functionality. Also, paid upgrades are still a matter of great debate and discomfort in the iOS universe, so the normally logical idea of a paid “Transmit 2 for iOS” would be unlikely to help. And the app needs full-time work - we’d love to be adding all of the new protocols we added in Transmit 5, as well as some dream features, but the low revenue would render that effort a guaranteed money-loser. That’s not enough to cover even a half-time developer working on the app.

Transmit iOS made about $35k in revenue in the last year, representing a minuscule fraction of our overall 2017 app revenue. …but, quite sadly, there just weren’t enough of these lovely people. This app is easier to use, faster, better written and more effective at managing files on my NAS and servers than the vendor-supplied apps. I think we made an app that is beautiful, elegant, and extremely powerful - a really great way to manage files on iOS with a wide variety of server types.įor people who needed it, Transmit iOS was truly much-loved… I’m extremely proud of the finished product. Finally, we thought, in addition to using Transmit iOS to upload/download whatever you need, you could easily (?) get data out of apps and send it to your favorite servers. Transmit for iOS always felt like an obvious addition to our lineup, but we never thought it made a ton of sense in the tightly-restricted world of iOS until Apple announced the “Share Sheet” for iOS 8. We really hope to bring it back someday in some form.This also does not affect Coda iOS and Prompt iOS, both of which are still going strong.

IS THERE A MAC OS CLIENT FOR STRANGE BRIGADE UPDATE
Here’s an update on Transmit iOS that I promise will not use the words “sunset” or “journey”.
