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.

If you’ve ever been frustrated by slow uploads, confusing sharing permissions, or the hidden costs of “free” cloud storage, let me introduce you to . I’ve been using it for several months now, and it has quietly become one of my most-used productivity tools.

FileSlack: The Lightweight File Transfer Tool That Just Works Review by [Your Name/Handle] | Date: [Current Date]

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.

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.