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qrcp 0.11.6, released by Claudio d’Angelis, is a lightweight open-source command-line utility designed to move files between a computer and any mobile device over the local Wi-Fi network without installing companion apps or leaving the terminal. Once invoked, the program binds to a random high port on the host, generates an ephemeral QR code that encodes the corresponding HTTP or HTTPS URL, and displays it directly in the console; the user simply aims the phone or tablet camera at the code to open the link in a browser and accept the transfer. Because the payload travels over the LAN rather than the Internet, transfers are fast, private, and unaffected by cloud quotas. Typical use cases include pushing installers, documents, photos, or entire folders from a development machine to a test handset, retrieving media captured on the phone for quick editing, or sharing presentation materials between laptops and tablets during meetings. Network administrators also value the tool for ad-hoc distribution of configuration files or logs to field devices without enabling SMB, FTP, or USB debugging. The single-binary distribution runs on Windows, macOS, and Linux, needs no elevated rights, and cleans up the exposed endpoint automatically once the download finishes or the timeout elapses, minimizing the attack surface. qrcp is catalogued under Network Tools / File Sharing and is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are provided through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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