Windows Internet Apps
PureVPN v15.15.0.2
Thunderbird v151.0
NoScript for Firefox v10.2.0
Fiddler v2024
Ashampoo ClipFinder v2.52
Wing FTP Server v2025
LinkAssistant v6.51
Tixati v2.58
Polarity v2024
ICQ v10.0 Build 12408
NordVPN v4.6.0
Crunchyroll App v2.0.5.0
DC++ v0.883
UniFab Video Upscaler AI v2025
Hulu App v2025
Microsoft Azure Portal v2021
DeepSeek App v2025
HFS v2025
Xlight FTP Server v2025
Zen Browser v1.19.13b
Helium v2025
SoftPerfect Network Scanner v7.1.5
TurboFTP v7.31.1655
Evernote v10.140.3
About Internet
The Internet category is a broad one, gathering the software that sits between your computer and the network: email clients, site-building tools, server programs, transfer utilities, and connection helpers. Because it casts such a wide net, it pays to know which sub-job you are after before browsing it.
Email clients are one steady part of the group. A desktop client keeps mail on your own machine, works across several accounts at once, and stays usable offline — a different model from reading everything in a browser tab. People who handle a lot of mail, or who want a local archive, tend to prefer one.
Another part is tooling for people who run things online: site software, server applications, and utilities for managing remote hosts. These assume some technical background and are not aimed at casual use. Alongside them sit network helpers — connection tools, privacy utilities, and diagnostic programs for when something on the network misbehaves.
Because the category is so mixed, no single piece of advice fits all of it. The useful question is what you are connecting to and why: sending mail, publishing a site, moving files to a server, or shaping your own connection. Once that is clear, the narrower categories — communication, FTP clients, VPN, web browsers — often hold a closer match than this general one.






















