


That is when I found and installed NetDrive and found, to my delight, that it worked perfectly. Another program I found, FTP Drive, exhibited the exact same behavior. I recently came across a software called Red Drive Shell Extension which is supposed to do just that unfortunately, although in theory it seemed to work on my system, it kept flashing constant error messages which made it impossible to use. Imagine how cool it would be if your FTP server is mapped to a windows drive that behaved just like any other drive in the windows file system, whereby you could edit and save files just as you would on your hard drive or simply drag, drop and manage your files within explorer.

Whether you are a developer and/or work with websites or you use an FTP server to store and back up your files, using an FTP client like FileZilla is a daily routine for many of us. You can map multiple servers to multiple drives and assign each one the drive letter of your choosing. NetDrive allows you to map a drive on a Windows, Novell, or Linux server via FTP, SFTP, WebDAV or iFolder so that it shows up as a regular drive in explorer and behaves very much as a local drive would in the Windows file system.
