Filevista 7.5.0.0 » Developer.Team

Filevista 7.5.0.0

Filevista 7.5.0.0
Filevista 7.5.0.0 | 101 Mb


The file manager looks and feels like Windows File Explorer and follows user interface guidelines. Let your users easily manage their files with the comfortable and intuitive approach already known from the daily desktop working environment and minimize user learning curve.

Actions are both represented on the ribbon (top) toolbar and in the context menus and they are automatically disabled/hidden when not available e.g. when corresponding permissions are not granted. This way users will only see the actions that are available to them and they will not be confused.

Navigation (folders) pane allows fast hierarchy browsing and breadcrumb navigation bar allows users to keep track of their location and to drill down folders easily.

Folder contents are displayed via a multi-view which supports 6 different view layouts: Extra large icons, Large icons, Medium icons, Small icons, Details and Tiles. Thumbnails for all common image and video files are displayed. For all other file types, high-res icons are displayed.

View Any Document Anywhere
Advanced Document Viewer can open and display (read-only) wide range of document file formats:

Microsoft Word
Microsoft Excel
Microsoft PowerPoint
Microsoft Visio
Microsoft Outlook
OpenDocument Formats
AutoCAD (R13) Drawing
PDF
XPS
and more...
Your users don't need to have an application (eg. Microsoft Office) on their computer to be able to view these documents.

The Document Viewer supports High Resolution. Text, fonts and vector elements are preserved and rendered in high-res with no rasterization. Zoom in as much as you want, your documents will look great and same as they do in the program that created them.

Play Video and Audio Files
Media Player can open and play all common video formats:

MP4, M4V
F4V
MOV
FLV
WEBM
OGV
and on some browsers MP4V, 3G2, 3GP, MKV
and all common audio formats:

MP3
AAC
M4A
F4A
OGG, OGA
VORBIS
Media Player will first try Html5 video feature of the browser and if not supported it will try Flash mode. If a media format is not playable at all on the browser, media player will prompt the user to try opening the file directly on his computer/device so you automatically have a streaming media server.

View Image Files
Image Viewer can display all common image formats including Photoshop:

Jpeg
Png
Gif
WebP
Bmp
Tiff
Tga
Psd
Image Viewer supports zooming, panning, rotating and flipping. Transparent images will be displayed with a nice background pattern to differentiate them from images with solid color backgrounds.

Browse Archive Files
The contents of all common archive formats can be browsed just like regular folders:

ZIP
7Z
RAR
TAR
GZ
TAR.GZ (TGZ)
TAR.BZ2 (TBZ, TBZ2)
This is similar to "Compressed Folders" in Windows Explorer but for all archive formats not just for zip format. In addition, it supports displaying thumbnails while in archive and supports browsing nested archive files so it's more advanced than Windows Explorer's feature.

The zip files can be modified but other formats are read-only. For example, you can directly upload into zip files and download files directly from all archive files.

Decide Where You Store Files
Store your files on the local server or on the network without changing your existing folder structures. Create root folders which point to existing paths and start serving files immediately.

You can define 2 types of root folders:

Physical root folder which can point to one of the following:
A local path, e.g. d:\files
A network path (UNC), e.g. \\server\share
An application-relative path, e.g. ~/App_Data/RootFolder1
A virtual path, e.g. /webfolder/test
Amazon S3 root folder which points to a bucket
It's possible to connect to network folders or secured local folders via specific credentials or already authenticated Windows users.

Dynamic root folders can be created by using the predefined variables {User}, {Domain} and {UserWithDomain}. For example, you can create a root folder named "{User}'s home folder" with location "D:\AllUsers\{User}" and when a user named Joe logs in he will see a root folder named "Joe's home folder" which shows the contents of "D:\AllUsers\Joe"

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