Yesterday I was happy to announce Jemez, an website management application for web developers, and today I am happy to bring you more detail about it.
The aim of Jemez is an FTP program, but not like Transmit or Cyberduck. If I where forced to compare Jemez to any other product, I would say it is most like the FTP client built into Dreamweaver.
However, I’d like to give you some numbers comparing Jemez’s FTP speed to the speed of other FTP applications:
2.0 MB file
Jemez: Uploaded in 45 seconds.
Transmit: Uploaded in 42 seconds.
Cyberduck: Uploaded in 46 seconds.
Dreamweaver: Uploaded in 63 seconds.
20 MB file
Jemez: Uploaded in 450 seconds.
Transmit: Uploaded in 460 seconds.
Cyberduck: Uploaded in 470 seconds.
Dreamweaver: Uploaded in 630 seconds.
1 GB file
Jemez: Uploaded in 20 minutes.
Transmit: Uploaded in 22 minutes.
Cyberduck: Uploaded in 25 minutes.
Dreamweaver: Uploaded in 1 hour and 13 seconds.
As you can see, Jemez outperforms all other FTP clients (except for Transmit) in almost all categories.
Jemez , unlike Dreamweaver, Transmit, and Cyberduck, keeps a constant track of modification dates and which files needs to be uploaded, so there is no pre-upload delay.
Also unlike the three clients, Jemez is designed to work quickly. Instead of opening an application, selecting your site, waiting for a connection, selecting files, and clicking upload, Jemez allows you to double click, click upload, and then your upload starts instantly.
With virtually no load time, Jemez will certainly become the standard for web-masters.