
The operation will start as soon as you indicate the directory and confirm the destination. Click Browse on the right side to Select target folder (where you want to copy the items to). In this case, the Copy option is selected by default but you can Switch to Move mode by just clicking on the Copy button. However, the panel that pops up on the screen when choosing TeraCopy from the right-click menu is different than the one launched when double-clicking the app's. If you pick the regular Copy option, then a window appears to ask if you want to Copy with TeraCopy or Copy with Explorer. Click to select a file or folder and hold down Ctrl to select multiple files or folders. Once installed, TeraCopy gets integrated into the context menu menu of Windows Explorer ( TeraCopy.). All of them are capable of using the OS buffer size to reduce task time when performing operations between different hard disks. It also sometimes fails to successfully carry out tasks, creating corrupt files after you've spent a lot of time waiting.īecause of this, we have selected three versatile tools to show you how to copy or move files quickly and safely: TeraCopy, Ultracopier and FastCopy.

However, the OS doesn't deliver the results you'd expect when putting it in charge of handling large-sized files or batches of numerous files and folders. Icon file: C:\Program Files\WApplets\TeraCopy Portable\teracopy.Windows does a pretty good job at copying and moving files from one place to another if the job is relatively easy (there aren't too many files or they have a small size). Start path: C:\Program Files\WApplets\TeraCopy Portable\ Maybe with this thread TeraCopy integration can be integrated.Ĭommand: C:\Program Files\WApplets\TeraCopy Portable\teracopy.exe Funnily enough I have a button in TC that seems to work, but I've forgotten where I got the information from. There's a couple of comments here on the (English) forum about TeraCopy integration - but nothing I can find that says how.

TeraCopy says it will allow you to resume, and to recover from errors, copy 'faster', etc. 'Resume' is the primary feature I'm after - TC's copy of a 4 GB file failed the other day as one computer on the LAN here rebooted.

I'm looking for a more robust, flexible, self-managing copy function than the one(s) TC offers, and as far as I can determine TeraCopy looks as though it might fill the bill.
