Fileslack [Full]
It won’t replace Dropbox for team collaboration, but for ad-hoc, secure, high-speed transfers, it’s currently the best tool in its class. The lack of a mobile app stings a little, but the desktop and web experience are so solid that it’s easy to overlook.
You can send files up to 10GB for free, with no daily caps that kneecap you after one transfer. For freelancers and small teams, that’s genuinely usable without paying a cent. fileslack
The UI is refreshingly minimal. Drag, drop, get a link. That’s it. No pop-ups begging you to upgrade, no “subscribe to Pro” buttons on every click. It feels like software from an era that respected your time. It won’t replace Dropbox for team collaboration, but
This is the killer feature. You don’t need to hand over your email, phone number, or create yet another password. Generate a link or a short code, share it, and the file is sent directly. FileSlack offers optional end-to-end encryption, so even they can’t see what you’re sending. For freelancers and small teams, that’s genuinely usable
At its core, FileSlack is a no-nonsense, peer-to-peer (or cloud-light) file transfer service. It strips away everything you don’t need—ads, storage limits, signup walls—and focuses on getting your files from Point A to Point B quickly and securely. The Good (Why You’ll Love It) 1. Blazing Fast Speeds Unlike traditional cloud drives that bottleneck through a central server, FileSlack uses intelligent routing. I transferred a 2GB video file in under 4 minutes—faster than both WeTransfer and Google Drive on the same connection.