FileCatalyst Direct is a suite of server and client applications that enable point-to-point accelerated file transfers to anywhere, from anywhere at speeds of up to 10Gbps. By utilizing a patented UDP-based file transfer technology, FileCatalyst overcomes the issue of slow file transfers caused by network impairments such as latency and packet loss. FileCatalyst Direct will change your file transfer times from hours to minutes and minutes to seconds.
“Accelerating file transfers in a secure and reliable manner has given us the ability to maximize our bandwidth, and the mobile application has provided a major advantage over our competition. We couldn’t be happier with FileCatalyst.”
~ Express Media Group
The FileCatalyst Direct suite of applications are designed to meet needs that are dependent on your specific file transfer workflow. Each application is purpose-built for a specific job, and is a culmination of our 20 years of experience helping organizations solve their file transfer issues.
FileCatalyst Server is a required component, and you can choose the client applications that fit your file transfer needs. Not sure where to begin? We dive a little deeper in our Master Fast File Transfer Applications where we explain things further.
Explore FileCatalyst Direct Applications
Your files are secured in transit, and at rest, with the latest encryption standards. Intrusion detection and IP Filters provide additional layers of security.
Guarantee file delivery with checkpoint restart, and MD5 checksum verification.
Further reduce transfer time with lossless compression techniques that leverage GZIP and/or LZMA algorithms.
Our incremental transfer feature allows users to send only portions of a file that has changed thereby reducing transfer sizes by up to 90%.
Transfer files while they are still growing, being encoded or have long pauses in their growth.
Integrate with major public clouds storage including Amazon S3, Microsoft Azure, Dropbox, Backblaze B2, Swiftstack and Wasabi.
This generation never knew the height of the military dictatorship (1964–1985) as adults, but they were the direct beneficiaries of the democratic opening ( Abertura ) and the subsequent rise of the PT. They are the children of the MST’s struggle for land reform and the children of the hope that Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s election in 2002 represented. This paper explores two central questions: (1) How did the MST’s pedagogical and communal structures shape the identity of this generation? (2) What remains of that "hope" after the institutional rupture of Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment (2016) and the rise of Bolsonarismo? To understand the children, one must understand the parents. The 1980s in Brazil were a decade of redemocratization but also of severe economic crisis (hyperinflation) and urban violence. For the rural poor, it was a decade of massacre. The MST, formally established in 1984, emerged as a response to the concentration of land ownership ( latifúndio ). The "hope" of the 1990s was not naive optimism; it was a strategic survival mechanism.
[Generated AI Academic Correspondent] Subject: Latin American Studies / Political Sociology Date: October 2023 Abstract This paper examines the socio-political identity of Os Filhos da Esperança (The Children of Hope), a term used to describe the first generation of Brazilian children born and raised within the organized agrarian reform settlements of the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST) and those coming of age during the ideological peak of the Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT) in the early 21st century. Contrasting with the "lost generation" of the 1980s, this cohort was raised on principles of conscientização (critical consciousness), collective labor, and militant hope. Using a framework of social movement theory and Paulo Freire’s pedagogy, the paper argues that while the political landscape of post-2016 Brazil has fragmented their original utopian vision, the Filhos da Esperança represent a unique case study in the intergenerational transmission of counter-hegemonic values. 1. Introduction In the lexicon of Brazilian social movements, the phrase Os Filhos da Esperança carries a weight distinct from its literal translation. While globally recognized as the Portuguese title for Alfonso Cuarón’s dystopian film Children of Men , within the rural sertão (hinterland) and the urban periferia (periphery), it refers to a specific generation. These are the individuals who were born in the late 1980s and 1990s, inside makeshift shanties that would become permanent acampamentos (encampments) or in the first brick homes of agrarian reform assentamentos . os filhos da esperanca
This creates the By 2020, data from the Setor de Educação do MST indicated that over 60% of children from MST settlements who attended university did not return to live in the assentamentos permanently. Instead, they became lawyers defending the MST in state capitals or agronomists working for NGOs. Are they still Filhos da Esperança ? The paper argues yes—but their hope is now "professionalized" rather than territorialized. 5. The Political Rupture: The 2016 Coup and its Aftermath The impeachment of Dilma Rousseff in 2016 was a watershed moment for this generation. Having come of age during the Lula/Dilma years, they had never experienced a federal government actively hostile to their existence. The rise of Jair Bolsonaro (2019–2022), who famously stated that no sem terra (landless) would occupy an inch of Brazilian land, radicalized the Filhos in a way their parents had not anticipated. This generation never knew the height of the
The difference is that the Filhos are not a passive messianic symbol. They are active agents. In the 2022 election, this generation mobilized via WhatsApp and TikTok to re-elect Lula. They understood that hope is not a feeling but a method. Os Filhos da Esperança represent a successful—if fragile—case of social reproduction. The MST and the PT managed to raise a generation that is more literate, more politically sophisticated, and more connected to global networks than their parents. However, success has bred ambiguity. The "hope" of the 1990s was predicated on staying on the land; the "hope" of the 2020s is predicated on defending the land from the city. (2) What remains of that "hope" after the
Os Filhos da Esperança: The Legacy of Brazil’s Agrarian and Leftist Generation
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