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Rymdport, currently at version 3.9.1 and evolved through three published releases, is a cross-platform file-transfer utility created by Jacob Alzén that enables straightforward, encrypted sharing of files, folders, or plain text between computers, tablets, or phones without prior configuration or cloud accounts. Built atop the established magic-wormhole protocol, the program negotiates a short, human-readable code that sender and recipient exchange; once the code is entered, data streams directly between endpoints with end-to-end encryption, ensuring that even if traffic is intercepted it remains unreadable. Because it adheres to the open wormhole specification, Rymdport interoperates seamlessly with command-line wormhole clients on Linux, macOS, Windows, BSD, or Android, so users are not locked into a single application ecosystem. Typical scenarios include designers delivering large mock-ups to clients, students submitting project folders to instructors, system administrators pushing patches across segmented networks, or privacy-minded individuals transferring passwords or keys without relying on third-party servers. The interface presents a minimal two-pane layout: one side for sending where items are dragged in or pasted, and one side for receiving where the brief code is typed; progress bars and transfer logs provide immediate feedback, while optional settings allow code-word length and relay server selection to be tuned for speed or compliance. As a lightweight, portable title, Rymdport fits the “File Sharing” category of utilities and serves as a practical complement to cloud drives, USB sticks, and email attachments when direct, secure, one-off exchanges are required. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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