Today, what we have here is a RapidShare alternative that proves one more time that good functionality makes a bad design nothing but a small detail you shouldn’t really care about. After all, I would use a file upload service that offers a file size limit of 5 GB and decent speed even if its main page would have 500 banners and a tiny text link saying “upload” hidden somewhere between them… but things are far from being that bad with YourFileLink, as you can see in the image below! ![]()

YourFileLink looks great in theory and, partially, in practice. I have nothing against it, only that the theoretical file size limit didn’t work for me in practice – when adding a 2.9 GB archive, it kept saying that I have to agree with the ToS, but this didn’t happen when I used a smaller file, about 100 MB in size. No need to say that I selected that “I agree…” checkbox every time, right? Oh, in case you were wondering – in both cases I used Opera, so I guess it can’t be related to the browser, either.
Best part of it all? YourFileLink may be swarming with ads, but there’s no paid or free account available, just a free file upload service that gets the job done – no limits (both uploads and downloads are pretty fast), no captchas on download, only a “10-to-download” countdown, so go ahead and take advantage of this excellent RapidShare alternative I found for you while it’s still up, will you?
That’s all, folks! Have a nice weekend and be careful not to upload copyrighted stuff that you’re not supposed to share, all right?














I have a question… did you ever feature MediaFire on here? I think it’s a great RapidShare alternative. Only bad thing is the slow upload speed.
Not yet, but it’s a worthy choice for the near future. I used it myself a few times, but somehow forgot about it in the meantime. Thank you for the idea!