

Thank you
I will check it out again if and when I need to do a clean out.
I do create a lot of duplicates as I move and transfer files between 3 laptops.
Thank you
I will check it out again if and when I need to do a clean out.
I do create a lot of duplicates as I move and transfer files between 3 laptops.
Hey Dessalines
I never got on with rmlint. It never felt safe to me.
I found fclones to be much better and safer.
Plus there is a GUI version for those not using the terminal
Gui Version https://github.com/pkolaczk/fclones-gui
CLI version https://github.com/pkolaczk/fclones
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
Usage
fclones offers separate commands for finding and removing files. This way, you can inspect the list of found files before applying any modifications to the file system.
group – identifies groups of identical files and prints them to the standard output
remove – removes redundant files earlier identified by group
link – replaces redundant files with links (default: hard links)
dedupe – does not remove any files, but deduplicates file data by using native copy-on-write capabilities of the file system (reflink)
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
I did actually test this by creating a directory with duplicates.
test_dupes 186 files
scanned directory for duplicates and created dupes.txt
fclones group . >>dupes.txt
dupes.txt
remove duplicates to another directory
/home/user/Desktop/dupes
fclones move target_dir <dupes.txt
fclones move /home/user/Desktop/dupes <dupes.txt
test_dupes now has 173 files
I completely forgot about endeavourOS.
I used to have it on my gaming rig. Pretty desktop.
just remembered arco-linux too, but I think thats been discontinued.
Ho sfanculato Mozilla e Firefox 4 anni fa. Prima muoiono entrambi, meglio è.
transalation for you inglish:
I ditched Mozilla and Firefox four years ago. The sooner they both die, the better.
https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/09/firefox-adding-copilot-chatbot-features
Try Librewolf, doesnt have ai
As you are a noob, avoid arch.
It maybe great for your self esteem telling people you are an arch user, but vanilla arch is not a simple distro. it takes a lot of work.
So, unless you have a lot of linux and terminal experience try something else.
If you want to play with an arch based distro there is manjaro.
I have manjaro installed on my old Lenovo T450 for years and it works great.
Alternatively give linux mint XFCE a try. I usually install this for people who are new users of linux.
or I have MX-linux installed on the Mrs laptop. she has the lenovo T470.
install guides:
https://linuxmint-installation-guide.readthedocs.io/en/latest/install.html
https://itsfoss.com/install-manjaro-linux/
https://www.debugpoint.com/install-mx-linux/
if you want to try vanilla arch
for me
locate --version
returns:
plocate 1.1.23
sudo apt-get install plocate
not locate
Hey Droechai
How about trying Sparklinux
They have stable, oldstable and oldoldstable images.
based on debian.
I use sparky on both my raspberry pi 3B’s.
Sparky 7 still supports i686 architecture (32 bit).
ISO MinimalGUI i686 (32 bit)
Thank you cravl
Much appreciated
He probbaly didn’t realise the committment involved.
Sitting in someones front garden, on the edge of a pond with a red pointy hat, with a fishing rod, for days on end, can be very tiring.
Then you got the cats pissing on you and the birds landing on your head.
Its no fun, I can tell you.
Its tough being a gnome
I got used typing “sudo service --status-all”
then got used to typing “sudo systemctl list-unit-files --type=service”
now a new one to learn “sudo nitroctl list”
looks simpler
That can only be a good thing for my gnarly arthritis fingers.
Hey SteveTech
I dont use internal or external SSD’s.
It maybe because I am an old greybeard, but I prefer to suffer the slight loss in speed of a HDD, so I can dd/erase/wipe them and reuse them again and again.
Though I have been using “disktest” to erase SSD’s and HDD’s recently and it has been working great. Much faster than zeroing with dd /dev/zero, shred or wipe.
https://crates.io/crates/disktest
https://github.com/mbuesch/disktest
However, I digress, I had not heard of f2fs before.
Ive been having an intersting read online.
It appears that it is a default for android phones.
I do have a few SSD’s laying around from when I replace them with HDD’s. So I will test f2fs on one of those.
Thank you
Hey pitiable_sandwich540
Thank you
I dont know why I have been so focussed and stuck on exFAT for all these years.
It must have been something I read somewhere that led me to it.
from all the decent feedback i have gotten on here, ext4 seems the best way to go.
I should have known this being a linux user for over 20 years.
Hey IanTwenty
Thank you
ext4 seems the way to go for me
Thank you Eideen
I have never used any back up programs, Maybe I should consider it.
Both Borg and Pike-backup are in the offical repos (extra).
I shall check them out
Thank you nyan
I will look into the dmask and fmask mount options.
Definitely a no! in regards to attaching my drives to any windows machine.
The last windows machine I turned on was a Windows 95 machine when they first came out.
I thank god, That I wouldnt even know how to turn on a windows 10 or 11 surveillance machine.
Thank you Hack3900
Thank you SavvyWolf
This is particularly annoying when I have to upgrade my distro and all my files have to be moved to an external drive.
Unfortunately some of my files are up to 10Gb. thats why I stayed with exFAT.
I will certainly try Ext4 on my external drives.
Thank you Eugenia
Compressisng the files sounds a great idea.
I have in fact compressed a 12Gb file that I split into 10Gb chunks that still decompresses without problems.
This is particularly annoying when I have to upgrade my distro and all my files have to be moved to an external drive.
Unfortunately some of my files are up to 10Gb. thats why I stayed with exFAT.
I will certainly try Ext4 on my external drives. I will test it this week
Hey arsus5478
There are instructions to install with wget on the git page as you mention and you seem to have folowed that guide, but the easiest way is to use APT.
For debian I would add the PPA repo:
There are clear instruction on the git page to install from apt.
About half way down the page you will see APT.
https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/wiki/Installation
APT
You can download and install yt-dlp for recent Ubuntu and other related Debian-based distributions by adding this PPA
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:tomtomtom/yt-dlp
sudo apt update
sudo apt install yt-dlp
Your system’s package manager will now automatically download the correct dependencies and keep the package updated with the rest of your system whenever you update:
Done
this is a good introduction to adding an external PPA repo to apt and getting to know debian
Wow!
I was hoping that one day I could install edge on my arch distro and have the bestest ever, private and secure browser in the whole world.
But then I woke up from my dream. I told my psychoanalyst about my dream, and she said I was suffering from delusions and my dream was a narcissistic fantasy. Oh well.
++++++++++++++
I use edge-frfox so I can have the edge experience without all the drama, surveillance, tracking.
http://aur.archlinux.org/packages/edge-frfox
https://github.com/bmFtZQ/edge-frfox
A Firefox userChrome.css theme that aims to recreate the look and feel of Microsoft Edge.
OH goodie.