Shortly after the release of Anarchie 2.0 in 1996, Stairways was joined by Andrew Tomazos, who managed the product for five years until the release of Interarchy 7.0. Anarchie gained HTTP support by version 3.5, which also dropped Archie support in favor of Apple's Sherlock tool. Topic Abstract 1: Learn to Find the Hidden Treasure in Your Interarchy. Facilitators: Rubi Gemmell and Jane Taft, Principals at InterarchyIQ, LLC Every organization has a cross functional interarchy through which work is done, yet it remains uncharted territory and its riches largely untapped.
Developer(s) | Nolobe |
---|---|
Stable release | |
Operating system | macOS |
Type | FTP client |
License | Proprietary |
Website | interarchy.com |
Interarchy is a FTP client for macOS supporting FTP, SFTP, SCP, WebDAV and Amazon S3. It is made by Nolobe and supports many advanced features for transferring, syncing and managing files over the Internet.
Interarchy was created by Mac programmer Peter N Lewis in 1993 for MacintoshSystem 7.[1] Lewis went on to form Stairways Software in 1995 to continue development of Interarchy. In 2007 Lewis sold Interarchy to Matthew Drayton of Nolobe who continues to develop Interarchy to this day.[2] Drayton was an employee of Stairways Software having worked as a developer of Interarchy alongside Lewis since 2001.
Interarchy was originally called Anarchie because it was 'an Archie' client. The name was changed to Interarchy in 2000 due to a conflict with a cybersquatter.[3]