We are all familiar with file managers. It’s that piece of software that allows you to access your directories, files in a GUI.

Most of us use the default file manager included with our desktop of choice. The creator of Polo hopes to get you to use his file manager by adding extra features but hides the good ones behind a paywall.

Polo file manager

What is Polo file manager?

According to its website, Polo is an “advanced file manager for Linux written in Vala)”. Further down the page, Polo is referred to as a “modern, light-weight file manager for Linux with support for multiple panes and tabs; support for archives, and much more.”

It is from the same developer (Tony George) that has given us some of the most popular applications for desktop Linux. Timeshift backup tool, Conky Manager, Aptik backup tools for applications etc. Polo is the latest offering from Tony.

Note that Polo is still in the beta stage of development which means the first stable version of the software is not out yet.

Features of Polo file manager

Polo File Manager in Ubuntu Linux

It’s true that Polo has a bunch of neat features that most file managers don’t have. However, the really neat features are only available if you donate more than $10 to the project or sign up for the creator’s Patreon. I will be separating the free features from the features that require the “donation plugin”.

Support cloud storage

Free Features

Multiple Panes – Single-pane, dual-pane (vertical or horizontal split) and quad-pane layouts.

Multiple Views – List view, Icon view, Tiled view, and Media view

Device Manager – Devices popup displays the list of connected devices with options to mount and unmount

Archive Support – Support for browsing archives as normal folders. Supports creation of archives in multiple formats with advanced compression settings.

Checksum & Hashing – Generate and compare MD5, SHA1, SHA2-256 ad SHA2-512 checksums

Built-in Fish shell

Support for cloud storage, such as Dropbox, Google Drive, Amazon Drive, Amazon S3, Backblaze B2, Hubi, Microsoft OneDrive, OpenStack Swift, and Yandex Disk

Compare files

Analyses disk usage

KVM support

Connect to FTP, SFTP, SSH and Samba servers

Polo in dual pane view

Donation/Paywall Features

Write ISO to USB Device

Image optimization and adjustment tools Optimize PNG Reduce JPEG Quality Remove Color Reduce Color Boost Color Set as Wallpaper Rotate Resize Convert to PNG, JPEG, TIFF, BMP, ICO and more

PDF tools Split Merge Add and Remove Password Reduce File Size Uncompress Remove Colors Rotate Optimize

Video Download via youtube-dl

Installing Polo

Let’s see how to install Polo file manager on various Linux distributions.

1. Ubuntu based distributions

For all Ubuntu based systems (Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Elementary OS, etc), you can install Polo via the official PPA. Not sure what a PPA is? Read about PPA here.

sudo apt-add-repository -y ppa:teejee2008/ppa

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install polo-file-manager

2. Arch based distributions

For all Arch-based systems (Arch, Manjaro, ArchLabs, etc), you can install Polo from the Arch User Repository.

3. Other Distros

For all other distros, you can download and use the .RUN installer to setup Polo.

Thoughts on Polo

I’ve installed tons of different distros and never had a problem with the default file manager. (I’ve probably used Thunar and Caja the most.) The free version of Polo doesn’t contain any features that would make me switch. As for the paid features, I already use a number of applications that accomplish the same things.

One final note: the paid version of Polo is supposed to help fund development of the project. However, according to GitHub, the last commit on Polo was three months ago. That’s quite a big interval of inactivity for a software that is still in the beta stages of development.

Have you ever used Polo? If not, what is your favorite Linux file manager? Let us know in the comments below.

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