Are you wondering why your FTP client isn't able to handle simple tasks like copying files from one remote directory to another?
It's because the selected transfer protocol either does not support such transfers at all or because they are disabled by the involved servers or firewalls.
In such cases, the more sophisticated clients will inform you that you have to download the files to a temporary directory on your local machine and then upload them back to the destination folder - but most of the programs will silently disallow such operations in general.
The innovative solution for this problem provided by BitKinex is called "indirect transfers."
You can use clipboard or drag-and-drop exactly the same way you would in Windows Explorer for any transfer you start.
Simplify your work and don't worry about copying files on a remote server, or between two servers, or even between two servers running different transfer protocols!
For example, power users and administrators can mirror files from a WebDAV server to an FTP server or copy complex directory structures from an SFTP server to WebDAV.
Any combination of supported protocols is allowed and every request of that kind can be managed in detail (as described in the previous chapter) or resumed upon application restart.
Direct server-to-server transfers (FXP) are supported as well and you can use them whenever they can be handled by the involved servers.