To specify a whole path you would enter:
/Backup/Pictures/Trips/*to select all files with ous in the name, use *ous*to select all files with four letter names, use ????Comments [0]
Nice catchphrase too.
Give your domain search a happy ending.
There’s a whole world of domains out there—hundreds at the top-level and even more beyond. Whether you want a short URL or something big, Domainr helps you explore them all. Some of our favorites are ste.ph, streetstyl.es and iamthewalr.us.
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Using the terminal:
gksudo gedit /usr/share/applications/mimeinfo.cacheSearch for: x-directory/gnome-default-handler=and make sure the whole line reads x-directory/gnome-default-handler=nautilus-folder-handler.desktopinstead of:x-directory/gnome-default-handler=Thunar-folder-handler.desktopComments [0]
rdiff-backup tries to “combine the best features of a mirror and an incremental backup”. It’s a command line utility that not only gives you a plain mirror of your files, but also allows you to retrieve previous versions of your files using the extra difference data it keeps. This means you can quickly copy and paste to restore a file from your most recent backup, or retrieve the contents of files as they were at the time of any previous backup. rdiff-backup has built in support for network backups over SSH and is network-efficient and fast thanks to its incremental nature. It’s also possible to run rdiff-backup on Windows, soon I’ll be investigating whether it will work as a backup solution for the Windows systems on my network.
Tom has a nice rdiff-backup tutorial. Is there a GUI for all this somewhere?
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I mentioned this to my younger bother the other day. He was not old enough to remember it. One of Microsoft's first failures.
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We will try everything we normally do - from Wireless via Samba sharing to MP3 playback - and then some. I will test four times: two laptops and two installations, one 32-bit and 64-bit. And check everything in KDE and Gnome. This is probably the most extensive test I have done yet. We will practically do everything, from scratch. So not only is this a review, it's a full blown tutorial to turning your CentOS into a superb desktop.
Some of the stuff waiting you just a few mouse scrolls below:
- Live CD checks on two laptops (Wireless, Bluetooth, Web camera, NTFS support)
- Installation of a 32-bit edition
- Installation of a 64-bit edition
- Solving screen resolution issues
- Compilation
- Installing VMware Tools (in VMware Server and ESXi)
- Configuring startup programs in the session
- Configuring proxy
- Solving update problems via proxy
- Samba sharing
- Adding extra repositories
- Flash Player 10 on 32-bit and 64-bit machines
- MP3, Windows video playback
- Installing cool software (VLC, Skype, others)
- Applications
- Making CentOS pretty (new themes, styles in KDE and Gnome)
And more ... until your eyes water from sweet exhaustion. It shall definitely be intriguing. So follow me. Spare an hour or two and have a lovely read.
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Another very good back-up software for Linux. Using rsync it does backup or directory syncing, including remote transfers. Very solid.
EDIT: It seems I spoke to soon, luckyBackup chocked while backing up about 500GB of data overnite. Memory consumption was about 670MB when it became unresponsive. This is on a quad-core with 4gb of ram, so resources were plentiful. After the initial backup, subsequent delta transfers finished correctly.
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So much for LED MR16 Bulbs. They only lasted 3 months. Extremely expensive!
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There is virtually no latency here, amazing. http://www2.sandbox.google.com
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