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New in 1.85
- Fixes for Solaris (Thanks to Andreas Gerlich)
Ultimate Commander strives to be an incredibly powerful orthodox file manager developed with a special focus on usability, extensibility, portability, and power users.
Filer is a small file manager with a classic two-pane view. It supports all basic file operations like copy, move, rename, and delete.
The Open File Manager is a console-based Unix file manager with a Norton Commander look. It is based on ncurses, and it is very flexible.
The Rad File Manager is a file manager Web application that has the look and feel of an FTP client, but uses the HTTP protocol. Since information about each uploaded file is stored in a database, it can be easily integrated with existing Web sites and applications.
Using a command-line file manager is like stepping back in time. Most of them are based on Norton Commander, the old DOS standby. Both Midnight Commander and FD Clone display two panels and use either the function keys or keybindings to manipulate selected files. Midnight Commander even goes so far as to borrow the Norton Commander's blue and cyan color scheme.Command-line file managers not only pack considerable functionality into small programs, but also frequently include functions not found in many desktop file managers, such as as an FTP client and advanced sorting options. They are particularly apt to support a full set of keybindings; vifm even goes so far as to borrow vi keybindings. Even if you spend most of your time on the desktop, you should probably familiarize yourself with one command-line file manager for the rare time you need it. Fortunately, that's not hard to do.
Orthodox File Managers (OFM), also known as Commander-like file managers, are the family of file managers based on the old Norton Commander interface.
The following features more or less define the class of orthodox file managers:
- Two-panel directory view;
- Close integration with a command line;
- Extensive availability of keyboard shortcuts.
Other common features include:
- Quick-view application, and preferably an editor, for at least the most basic file types (this one almost belongs in the top group);
- Compressed archive handled like directories;
- FTP;
- Often have the word commander in the name.
All orthodox file managers have similar user interfaces. Interface varies among operating systems and graphic, text background. The orthodox file manager has two windows called panels where one is active and the other inactive. The idea is to manipulate files from active to inactive panel or within active panel. This gives user the ability to use only the keyboard, which makes the process much faster. Each panel shows information about the path (disk, folder, remote address...) and files with usually customizable columns that show relevant file information. Panels can be switched using tab key. Main sections of user interface are:
- path: shows the source/destination location of the directory in use
- information about directory size, disk usage and disk name
- panel with information about file name, extension, date and time of creation, last modification, permissions (attributes) and other
- info panel with number of files in directory, sum of size of selected files..
- tabbed interface (usually GUI file managers)
- function keys: F1–F10 have all the same functions under all OFM's: Example F5 always copies file(s) from active to inactive panel, while F6 moves the file.
Most functions are always available through shortcut keys. The introduction of tabbed panels to some managers made it possible to manipulate more than one action at the time. A frequently used feature is synchronization where multiple destinations can be updated from the same source. The ability to support many different archives, file systems and remote addresses made these file managers popular among administrators. The consistent interfaces made it possible to switch to any platform and be able to do the same work without much effort.
Perl FS 1.05
Plugin allows to write file system plugins for Total Commander in Perl language.
Simply take the plugin file that corresponds to your Perl's version (TotalCmdPerlFSplugin.ActivePerl5.6.wfx or TotalCmdPerlFSplugin.ActivePerl5.8.wfx), rename it as you like (e.g. MyPlugin.wfx) and create a new file with
the same name and .pl extension (MyPlugin.pl) which will contain your Perl code.
Category: TC File System Plugins
Status: freeware
Size: 93 KB
Author: Eugeniy Ogloblin
Added: 12.03.2004
Updated: 15.05.2004
Sorry for taking so long to restore this page. It got lost when obsession.se switched web hotels, and I only now (late May, 2006) realized that I did in fact have a local back-up. Thanks to all of you who have e-mailed me suggesting that I just snag it from archive.org, I did end up doing that to some extent, too.
Introductiongentoo is a modern, powerful, flexible, and utterly configurable file manager for UNIX systems, written using the GTK+ toolkit. It aims to be 100% graphically configurable; there's no need to edit config files by hand and then restart the application. gentoo is somewhat inspired in its look & feel by the classic Amiga program DirectoryOpus 4 (by GP Software), but is not a "clone". gentoo has been successfully tested on a variety of platforms, including Linux (x86, Alpha, and PS2/MIPS), Solaris, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD.
FeaturesSome of the main features of gentoo are:
- Written from scratch, in straight ANSI C and utilizing the GTK+ toolkit.
- Aims to be 100% graphically configurable, and comes pretty close, too.
- Powerful file recognition system allows you to configure how files of different types are shown (with colors and icons), and what happens when you doubleclick them (spawn image viewers, music players, etc).
- Includes more than 120 original pixmaps icons (16x15 pixels).
- Internal support for most file operations (copy, move, rename, makedir etc).
- Licensed under the GNU General Public License, and thus Open Source software.
Maintained by: [email protected]
port added: 02 Sep 2004 12:26:58
Also listed in: misc
FSGuide is a Norton Commander-clone for the web, which might be useful when you do not have shell access to your server, but want to perform various file operations. As a hosting provider, you can even give this tool to your hosting users, so they can access and modify their files through FSGuide - or you can use it yourself as a system administration tool.
Note: Due to the limitations of running scripts in server environment, you can reach only those files of the filesystem that are available to the web user (www-data or wwwrun used by Apache). In general, it's much more than just the files and directories under document root!
FSGuide features:
- user authentication (you can disable user authentication to use FSGuide without logging in)
- details of user access are configurable in a simple .ini file
- deeply customizable through its configuration file and the user.ini file, loads of peruser settings
- access control finetuning through access control lists in user ini file
- you can implement your own authentication module (eg. rdbms-based)
- two-panel display (supports sorting)
- directory bookmarks
- selecting files using checkboxes You can even "cross-copy" files between the two panels: after selecting files in both panels, just click the copy or move button - this way all the selected files are copied/moved to the other panel. If you click on the delete button, all the selected files in both panels are deleted.
- advanced file selection dialog (select files by regular expression, extension, extension group, permission, filesize, time)
- advanced mass renaming tool (add/remove characters, case conversion, regular expression rename)
- copying, moving, deleting files and directories even recursively
- renaming files or directories (only the first selected file)
- creating directories
- the file operations use no external commands (it helps multiplatform use)
- a one-line navigator on both panels. Clicking on parts of the navigator results in opening that subdirectory in the panel.
- downloading files (and optional bandwidth control mechanism)
- opening and displaying files:
- built-in detection for different filetypes (DOC, PDF, text, PHP, binary, etc.) by extension or contents
- displaying files depending on the result of the detection:
- files having .php and .inc extension are displayed using source highlight
- images files recognized by PHP are displayed as images: this helps a lot while organizing image files on a remote server (eg. if you use Windows).
- If there are no other special characters than #09 (tab), #10 (CR), #12 (page break), #13 (LF), the file is displayed as a simple textfile. The file is divided into 10000 characters long pages (you can use the "more" or "less" links to switch between pages)
- If there are other special characters in the file, or characters undefined in the ISO-8859-2 codepage, then the file is treated as a binary file. In this case the control characters, and ISO-8859-2's undefined characters (0x7f- 0x9f) are replaced with a dot (to avoid browsers displaying contents erroneously and to conform the HTML standard).
- file uploader:
- configurable number of files to upload at once
- you can configure any application to run after upload
- you can check to drop the original file when the application finishes
- file editor:
- plain text editor
- binary editor
- works under both Windows and Linux
- does not depend on third-party libraries or extensions and needs no RDBMS
- produces well-formatted, valid HTML 4.01 Transitional pages
- uses PHP's error messages to report errors of file operations (since the default messages contain all the important information about the errors). This will change in the future.
Author: Piotr Pszczolkowski ([email protected].)
Status: Stable release.
Version: 2.20
Licence: GNU GPL.
Donation: donation infoEvery panel can contain many tabs that show different directories. Ctrl+T (or right position in the menu) creates a new tab in the current panel, Ctrl+W (or right position in the menu) deletes the current tab from the current panel, and Ctrl+Enter opens a new tab for the chosen directory. The combination of keys for 'searcher' has been changed, and is now Ctrl+F7 (Alt+F7 is already used by GNOME). The combination of keys to create a new file has been changed to Ctrl+N (Ctrl+T is now used for creating a new tab in a panel). There is a position in the menu for changing panel places.
How much would you pay for an application that can do:
* file-manager inspired by Norton Commander, but with a modern Windows interface
* has two panes for easy file management
* every pane can have as many tabs as you want
* advanced file search with regular expressions
* rename multiple files
* split files (useful if you want to send a large file by email)
* pack/unpack files in ZIP format
* compare directories
* synchronize directories
* FTP client with support for SFTP
* document viewer that supports: text files, source code files (Assembler, C++, CSS, Delphi, FoxPro, JavaScript, Perl, PHP, SQL, XML), HTML, RTF, Word documents, Excel sheets, OpenOffice documents, executable files, DLL, INI files, registry files, image files (PNG, JPG, GIF, Paint Shop Pro, BMP, PSD, ICO, CUR, ANI, MAC, WMF, EMF, PIC), Flash, media files (MP3, WMA, OGG, AVI), database files (FoxPro, dBase, Paradox, Access, MySQL, CSV), archives (RAR, ZIP, TAR, GZ, 7zip, bzip2), disk image files (ISO, BIN, IMG, NRG)
* AES encryptor (encrypt/decrypt files with 128bit key using password or keyfile)
* decompilation of 32-bit PE executables (EXE SCR) and libraries (DLL OCX CPL BPL), resource files (RES DCR)
* create a list file with all selected files and directories
* count the size of all files in a directory
* shows informations about solar and moon dates, celebrations and calendars
* synchronize your local computer with atomic time via Internet
* browse NT events and services faster
* view/edit/kill processes that are running currently on the system
* RSS Reader
* CD/DVD burning
* view and edit files on ext2 partitions (useful to manage files on Linux partitions from Windows)
* mount disk images as additional virtual drives in system
* much more...
You can pay $34 or you can use it for free, if you don't mind clicking on a button everytime the application starts. Total Commander PowerPack is the most powerful Windows utility you can get for free. And the setup has less than 15MB.
Just compare this list of characteristics with the features of any other application and you will get the most feature-rich and the most powerful Windows application.
Have you ever wondered how many twin panel file managers or so called commanders are still out there? Well, I might be able to give you an impression. For some time now I was fishing for all that are still available online. Some are probably missing from the list, but there can not be many of them. The list includes only file managers with graphical user interface. Those that run in console are skipped for various reasons. List descends on release date.
The list is structured in two categories:
* boldly going on - last update is less than a years ago.
* ghostly ancestors - last update is lost but never forgotten.
Info was gathered on forums, through Google search and some user groups. Very informative sites are freshmeat.net and sourceforge.net. I also found some sites that have listed a lot of file managers, but at closer look I found that not all of them are twin-panel file managers. I only listed those that I could confirm. If someone corrects me with fresh data I’ll promptly change the list, otherwise I’ll update on undesignated period of time. In next days this list will end up on wikipedia, where I think it will be much more frequently updated. If you are in any way associated with these projects, please take care of correct data on the wikipedia.
While browsing through this list try to think about how much programmer’s power is lost in open source projects since everybody wants to start on his own. On the other hand Windows projects show that this is indeed an important aspect of file management. The most advanced ones for windows are shareware.
While gathering this info on file managers I also found that some info is very hard to find, thus was not included in the list. I’m talking about info like programming language and requirements. Some projects don’t even write down the program versions or dates of releases. You have to run the program to find the numbers. Last update is march. 2006.
… boldly going on
- Beesoft Commander - version: 2.13.1 s (25.2.2006) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Total Commander - version: 6.54a (16.2.2006) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Krusader - version: 1.70.0 (12.2.2006) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Gnome Commander - version: 1.1.6 s (12.2.2006) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Disk Order - version: 2.0 s (12.2.2006) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- xplorer^(2) - version: 1.5.0.0 (9.2.2006) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Directory Opus - version: 8.2.1.0 s (30.1.2006) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- EF Commander - version: 4.51 s (12.1.2006) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- RageWork - version: 2.4 s (1.1.2006) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- emelFM2 - version: 0.1.4 s (29.12.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- MuCommander - version: 0.8 beta1 (26.12.2005) - homepage - screenshot - Freeware
- WinSCP - version: 3.8 beta (20.12.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Free Commander - version: 2006 beta (17.12.2005) - homepage - screenshot - Freeware
- Worker - version: 2.11.1 s (15.12.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Frigate - version: 3.33 s (14.12.2005) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- BF Commander - version: 0.3.9 s (24.10.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- OpenSpace - version: 0.1.1 s (23.10.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Rad File Manager - version: 1.10 s (12.10.2005) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Magelan Explorer - version: 3.32 s (7.10.2005) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Servant Salamander - version: 2.5 beta 10 (27.9.2005) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Valami Commander - version: 0.4.3-pre1 (13.8.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Speed Commander - version: 11.01.4450 s (11.7.2005) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Jfilerunner - version: 0.1.1 s (9.7.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Filer - version: 0.0.12 s (3.7.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- XFE - version: 0.84 s (28.6.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- WinNC.net - version: 4.4 s (7.6.2005) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Gentoo - version: 0.11.55 s (4.6.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Tux Commander - version: 0.5.70 s (26.3.2005) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
… ghostly ancestors
- AB Commander - version: 6.7 s (20.12.2004) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Mini Gtk+ File Manager - version: 0.9 beta (16.6.2004) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Seksi Commander - version: 0.6 b (10.6.2004) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Pablo Commander - version: 1.4 s (27.5.2004) - homepage - screenshot - Freeware
- JKnightCommander - version: 0.0.2 s (15.5.2004) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Nico's Commander - version: 5.59 s (15.3.2004) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- Not A Commander - version: 1.0 a (2.3.2004) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Zemljanka Commander - version: 1.0.1 s (14.1.2004) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- X Northern Captain - version: 5.0.4 (5.1.2004) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Mr Commander - version: 0.1-6 a (22.7.2003) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- JExplorer - version: 1.7.0.4 s (26.6.2003) - homepage - screenshot - Freeware
- Dark Commander - version: 0.0.3 s (7.6.2003) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Linux Commander - version: 0.5.2 s (8.4.2003) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Open File Manager - version: 4 - Beta (4.1.2003) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- emelFM - version: 0.9.2 s (17.11.2002) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- Portos Commander - version: 1.0 s (29.10.2002) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- TKCommander - version: 0.7.1 a (26.2.2002) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- WinNavigator - version: 1.96 s (22.2.2002) - homepage - screenshot - Shareware
- KCommander - version: 1.92 s (4.2.2001) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- KNC - version: 1.90 s (27.10.2000) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
- FileRunner - version: 2.5.1 s (30.12.1999) - homepage - screenshot - GPL
Windows users mostly talk about Total Commander, Directory Opus, Speed Commander and Servant Salamander twin panel file managers. Total Commander is definitely the leader in this group, but other are closely behind it. Total Commander is from historical viewpoint unmatchable. This is also probably the reason why a lot of users still stick with it. Looking at features and user interface Total Commander is the most robust. Users on its forum get deep in the flame wars every time the improvement of GUI is mentioned. Most of the users prefer functionality over looks and great majority want it to perform fast without unnecessary bloat. For this reason a plugin system was introduced. Other candidates put a lot of time to user interfaces and feature set that has no direct connection to file management. Most Total Commander users demand those features to be kept to plugin system domain or to be connected to an outside application.
On Linux there is really only one graphical twin-panel file manager in constant development. That’s Krusader. There is a rival that is not very frequently updated, but still holds a big share of users and that’s Midnight Commander or mc that natively runs in text mode. It was last time updated on 23.07.2005. Others that show some development are Tux Commander, natively written for Gnome and multiplatform muCommander and JFileRunner that are written in Java. Krusader is file manager primarily build for KDE desktop environment harvesting a lot of it’s power and is taking a middle road in comparison to Total Commander on Windows operating system. It takes care of its GUI, but still puts a lot of focus on speed also minimizing feature set to strict file management. Other functions are integrated through KDE libraries and plugin system. Introduction of Useractions gave the user possibilities to automate procedures within the manager.
In last days, we were witnesses to resurrection of Gnome Commander in version 1.1.7. Good luck, Piotr!
Trend that is momentarily present in all leading commander style file managers, especially in Window environment is spreading functionality to image viewing of many raster and vector formats, editors for different documents metadata, thus stepping into by-file management domains. A lot of work is done on automating frequently repeated actions, parallel file operations and support for handling most (if not all) known packaging formats with encryption support. There is currently a user interface trend to have all functions open in twin panels instead of separate windows. This gives an impression that all twin panel file managers want to become multipurpose.
is a simple but powerful file manager for the UNIX console. It has been developed with the ol' good Midnight Commander as model. From version 0.6 and up lfm package also contains pyview, a text / hex file viewer to be used with or without lfm. Read README.pyview for more info about it.
Hello.I often wondered when exactly the first Norton Commander had been developed.
The reason for this is: When I was in school in Germany we had an OS called E.U.M.E.L. which was far better than any DOS that came later on. It used a programming language called ELAN and a virtual file system. Like in unix every user had his own personal directory and then there was a "father" directory to which you could copy files and an "archive" directy which was the floppy disk.
The system consisted of one PC - something like a 8086 - with a floppy drive in it and a serial connection to around five other "workstations" which were mainly only a screen and a keyboard, like the usual terminal/host environments of those days. It had two external 10MB Winchester hard drives connected, where one was backed up onto the other one every 20 mins.
I didn’t know any computer system before I saw this one in our computer room at the age of 16.
Of course the UI those days was completely command based, and the OS prompt was: "gib kommando:". There were commands like "edit", "copy", "delete", "run", "insert" etc, were the editor was far better than any dos based editor I ever saw years later, with print formatting TEX-like, tiled windows so you can program in two places in the same file etc. In the programming language you could use any shell command directly in your code, like it was a program function, and the other way round.
One day after creating a kind of GUI for the floppy disk system so that you didn't have to remember the name of each floppy disk to "login" to the floppy handler, I thought of doing the same for general file manipulation, because I hated all those typing - strange, being a programmer. :-)
So I created a GUI with two windows, one left, one right. In the left window I showed the inventory of the personal directory, on the right side was the father dir. With the function keys - that were never used before by any program I knew on the EUMEL OS- one could copy (from active to non active window), delete, run, edit, print the file under the cursor.
Files were tagged by pressing the space bar when over them, tagged state was shown by inverting the "color" (on monochrom displays). Commands were executed onto the tagged files, or - when there were none - on the file beneath the "cursor" - I guess I used a ">" on the left of the file for the cursor.
My "Dateimanager" as I called it in German (file manager in english) also had a title line which showed which commands were executed with which function keys. I don’t remember if it had a command line also, but due to the fact that there were only about 5 standard commands that were all on the function keys, that was not very useful anyway.
Unfortunately at that time I didn't even know that there was a "life outside of EUMEL". :-) What I had seen was the birth of the VC20 and later C64, which never were real computers in my eyes.
Then my teacher one day showed us a “Macintosh” with a “mouse” and a “graphical interface”. I looked at it and only told him: “That mouse will never make it in the future of computers. It is faster to press a key than to move a mouse around to try and click on small pictures.”
Years after I left school and my ELAN system on my own pc (bought for 13,000 DM) crashed and took all of my programs with it, I started to use DOS 3.0 and learn Pascal. I found out about useful programs as XTREE GOLD, and even later I saw the NORTON COMMANDER for the first time and could not believe my eyes. That looked more or less exactly like my file manager. I started with my file manager around the years 1983-1984 and included it in our OS so everybody could use it. So it was 2 years before the first NORTON COMMANDER.
I don’t think that the programmer did see something of my original program, because it only ran on our EUMEL system. But it is a kind of strange feeling that someone writes a program with such a huge impact in the computer business that I had programmed 2 years earlier, even if it was for another OS and not as complex. But that was due to the fact that I didn’t have any chance to distribute my programs to more ppl out of my school and so I hadn’t any feedback, and then I left school.
I hope this information is of some worth for you. It took me some time to write it down in a foreign language.
Greetings Thomas Friedrich
AutoHotkey is a free, open-source utility for Windows. With it, you can:
- Automate almost anything by sending keystrokes and mouse clicks. You can write a mouse or keyboard macro by hand or use the macro recorder.
- Create hotkeys for keyboard, joystick, and mouse. Virtually any key, button, or combination can become a hotkey.
- Expand abbreviations as you type them. For example, typing "btw" can automatically produce "by the way".
- Create custom data entry forms, user interfaces, and menu bars. See GUI for details.
- Remap keys and buttons on your keyboard, joystick, and mouse.
- Respond to signals from hand-held remote controls via the WinLIRC client script.
- Run existing AutoIt v2 scripts and enhance them with new capabilities.
- Convert any script into an EXE file that can be run on computers that don't have AutoHotkey installed.
Getting started might be easier than you think. Check out the quick-start tutorial.
More About Hotkeys
AutoHotkey unleashes the full potential of your keyboard, joystick, and mouse. For example, in addition to the typical Control, Alt, and Shift modifiers, you can use the Windows key and the Capslock key as modifiers. In fact, you can make any key or mouse button act as a modifier. For these and other capabilities, see Advanced Hotkeys.
Other Features
- Change the volume, mute, and other settings of any soundcard.
- Make any window transparent, always-on-top, or alter its shape.
- Use a joystick or keyboard as a mouse.
- Monitor your system. For example, close unwanted windows the moment they appear.
- Retrieve and change the clipboard's contents, including file names copied from an Explorer window.
- Disable or override Windows' own shortcut keys such as Win+E and Win+R.
- Alleviate RSI with substitutes for Alt-Tab (using keys, mouse wheel, or buttons).
- Customize the tray icon menu with your own icon, tooltip, menu items, and submenus.
- Display dialog boxes, tooltips, balloon tips, and popup menus to interact with the user.
- Perform scripted actions in response to system shutdown or logoff.
- Detect how long the user has been idle. For example, run CPU intensive tasks only when the user is away.
- Automate game actions by detecting images and pixel colors.
- Read, write, and parse text files more easily than in other languages.
- Perform operation(s) upon a set of files that match a wildcard pattern.
- Work with the registry and INI files.
License: GNU General Public License
Society
Groupthink : Two Party System as Polyarchy : Corruption of Regulators : Bureaucracies : Understanding Micromanagers and Control Freaks : Toxic Managers : Harvard Mafia : Diplomatic Communication : Surviving a Bad Performance Review : Insufficient Retirement Funds as Immanent Problem of Neoliberal Regime : PseudoScience : Who Rules America : Neoliberalism : The Iron Law of Oligarchy : Libertarian Philosophy
Quotes
War and Peace : Skeptical Finance : John Kenneth Galbraith :Talleyrand : Oscar Wilde : Otto Von Bismarck : Keynes : George Carlin : Skeptics : Propaganda : SE quotes : Language Design and Programming Quotes : Random IT-related quotes : Somerset Maugham : Marcus Aurelius : Kurt Vonnegut : Eric Hoffer : Winston Churchill : Napoleon Bonaparte : Ambrose Bierce : Bernard Shaw : Mark Twain Quotes
Bulletin:
Vol 25, No.12 (December, 2013) Rational Fools vs. Efficient Crooks The efficient markets hypothesis : Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2013 : Unemployment Bulletin, 2010 : Vol 23, No.10 (October, 2011) An observation about corporate security departments : Slightly Skeptical Euromaydan Chronicles, June 2014 : Greenspan legacy bulletin, 2008 : Vol 25, No.10 (October, 2013) Cryptolocker Trojan (Win32/Crilock.A) : Vol 25, No.08 (August, 2013) Cloud providers as intelligence collection hubs : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2010 : Inequality Bulletin, 2009 : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2008 : Copyleft Problems Bulletin, 2004 : Financial Humor Bulletin, 2011 : Energy Bulletin, 2010 : Malware Protection Bulletin, 2010 : Vol 26, No.1 (January, 2013) Object-Oriented Cult : Political Skeptic Bulletin, 2011 : Vol 23, No.11 (November, 2011) Softpanorama classification of sysadmin horror stories : Vol 25, No.05 (May, 2013) Corporate bullshit as a communication method : Vol 25, No.06 (June, 2013) A Note on the Relationship of Brooks Law and Conway Law
History:
Fifty glorious years (1950-2000): the triumph of the US computer engineering : Donald Knuth : TAoCP and its Influence of Computer Science : Richard Stallman : Linus Torvalds : Larry Wall : John K. Ousterhout : CTSS : Multix OS Unix History : Unix shell history : VI editor : History of pipes concept : Solaris : MS DOS : Programming Languages History : PL/1 : Simula 67 : C : History of GCC development : Scripting Languages : Perl history : OS History : Mail : DNS : SSH : CPU Instruction Sets : SPARC systems 1987-2006 : Norton Commander : Norton Utilities : Norton Ghost : Frontpage history : Malware Defense History : GNU Screen : OSS early history
Classic books:
The Peter Principle : Parkinson Law : 1984 : The Mythical Man-Month : How to Solve It by George Polya : The Art of Computer Programming : The Elements of Programming Style : The Unix Hater’s Handbook : The Jargon file : The True Believer : Programming Pearls : The Good Soldier Svejk : The Power Elite
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Last modified: March, 12, 2019