Check out the Victorinox @work series - so you can have your USB and screwdrivers always with you.
Check out the Victorinox @work series - so you can have your USB and screwdrivers always with you.
Put your SSD into this case and enjoy proper CD/DVD/BluRay emulation, multiple VHDs and much more.
EDIT: Not an ad, @[email protected] . Just the only case that has all these features. And it’s no affiliate link, so I don’t even get anything if somebody clicks on it.
What makes you think there’s no way of updating the firmware? Also, they could be made so that there’s a simple API (like a serial device exposed via USB) and apps for Win/macOS/Linux to update the label. But I guess the demand was never there.
Same here. Like “Cold! Look elsewhere…” 🤣
It’s a shame these never took off. I’d love for my various USB drives to have displays that show their labels and maybe even contents.
The template design is basically no code, IIRC. (But still complex.) Not sure about the code to use that template, though.
In a previous job we had a tool where you could export data to PDFs using JasperSoft. There’s JasperSoft Studio to design these reports. It’s basically drag&drop of the different types of boxes and fields onto your virtual page, give them the right names and the application will then fill in these boxes and fields and generate your PDF.
What’s the big selling point compared to ranger
, nnn
, yazi
or broot
?
Rather use dd_rescue
as it’ll retry if it encounters any reading issue.
This! My 32” 4K display is great for the screen estate. I’ve learned I can work much better with one large display than with 2-3 separate 1080p/1200p displays.
But on my 40” TV I couldn’t care less about it being “only” 1080p. That’s more than enough.
Currently, all answers are properly attributed. But once OpenAI will have trained and sell a “hackerman” persona, do you really think it will answer people’s questions with ”This answer was contributed by i_am_not_a_robot” or will it just sell this as its own answer?
This! And I’d probably add par2 parity files - just in case some bitrot happens.
“I’ve slept in a tent last night and it was pretty fun”
And it has repair tools that actually work and can make the filesystem usable again.
Back in the days we had these things. But I doubt this would work with USB-C adapters and a Steam Deck.
Most modern Intel chipsets support “Dual Role Device” (DRD) where they can act as host or client as needed.
I’ve never noticed any issues or long delays. My Raspberrys come up either way. Might take a bit longer if the NAS isn’t accessible - but they still come up. Only without the mounted shares, of course.
As an alternative, you could do the same using systemd.
What you suggest sounds a lot like the “Briefcase” that was in Windows 9x. I don’t know of something similar, especially not something integrated into Linux.
The easiest way might be to setup SyncThing to share all of your different folders and then subscribe to those you need on your laptop. Just be aware that if you delete a file on your laptop it will also be deleted on your desktop on the next sync. Unsubscribe from the folder first before freeing up the disk space.