tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.comments2021-03-31T15:47:07.021+01:00trembitsBart Nagelhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09322287750886186240noreply@blogger.comBlogger12125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-66024029390112476912021-03-31T15:47:07.021+01:002021-03-31T15:47:07.021+01:00Thanks, this was super useful to get the hidden CD...Thanks, this was super useful to get the hidden CD audio tracks from some PSX game prototypes!DaVincehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12849237719376355225noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-25284770606698259592016-09-18T19:46:53.020+01:002016-09-18T19:46:53.020+01:00Are you looking to make money from your traffic by...Are you looking to <b>make money</b> from your <b>traffic</b> by using <b>popunder ads</b>? <br />In case you are, did you take a look at <b><a href="http://popups.syntaxlinks.com/r/Clickadu" rel="nofollow">Clickadu</a></b>?Bloggerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07287821785570247118noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-48556078885805815922013-09-09T06:01:02.957+01:002013-09-09T06:01:02.957+01:00At least for the xargs in GNU findutils 4.4.2, add...At least for the xargs in GNU findutils 4.4.2, adding a -L actually causes xargs to completely ignore the -I switch... sigh. Thanks for the tip, it led me to my similar solution:<br /><br />echo tiled.png | cat filenames.tmp - | xargs montage -tile 4x<br /><br />filenames.tmp is a file containing all the tile filenames in one line (I needed the tiles in a very specific order, so I couldn't use find like you).Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13579013395210630136noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-73498966019038008072011-06-27T02:35:23.851+01:002011-06-27T02:35:23.851+01:00Klipper can have more or less than ten, depending ...Klipper can have more or less than ten, depending on your settings and how much you copy.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-11588281954443146992011-06-10T18:16:02.979+01:002011-06-10T18:16:02.979+01:00Klipper can have the last ten selections. Can any...Klipper can have the last ten selections. Can any of these tools keep in memory the last selections too?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-37602633176912723312011-03-14T12:44:59.972+00:002011-03-14T12:44:59.972+00:00Having looked it up again I see you're right. ...Having looked it up again I see you're right. I'll amend the post. Thanks.Bart Nagelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09322287750886186240noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-58283966171073936752011-03-12T20:20:46.077+00:002011-03-12T20:20:46.077+00:00I think the part in article about CLIPBOARD select...I think the part in article about CLIPBOARD selection is not correct. According to my knowledge PRIMARY selection and CLIPBOARD selection are both same in the way how they work. Having said that you can retrieve those selection ONLY if some application holds them. Either 'source' application or 'xsel', 'xclip' if you put it there. After all that's the main purpose of these tools. Once they loose selection they die. Cutbuffers is place where application can write something and then exit and anybody can still read it (that's why it's called buffer).mircinoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-68464856125219814172011-03-07T13:05:25.591+00:002011-03-07T13:05:25.591+00:00Under Ubuntu 10.10, I wanted a shortcut to put som...Under Ubuntu 10.10, I wanted a shortcut to put some words in the clipboard.<br />I set the shortcut to an executable #!/bin/bash file.<br />First i tried echo loulou | xsel<br />It works on the command line, but not by shortcut.<br />Then i tried echo loulou | xclip<br />It works by shortcut.<br /><br />Weird.piRnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-41528997652255764462011-01-24T16:44:44.587+00:002011-01-24T16:44:44.587+00:00Thanks to both -- that was all news to me.Thanks to both -- that was all news to me.Bart Nagelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09322287750886186240noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-42247504900576652172011-01-24T13:35:17.142+00:002011-01-24T13:35:17.142+00:00Note that there are two distinct utilities named &...Note that there are two distinct utilities named "xsel", though they seem to do quite the same thing:<br /><br />http://www.vergenet.net/~conrad/software/xsel/<br />http://www.niksula.hut.fi/~vherva/xsel/<br /><br />Looks like the latter has fallen abandoned, both by maintainers and users, and is admittedly based on xcutsel, a fourth utility of this genre. So a list is:<br /><br />- xsel (1)<br />- xsel (2)<br />- xcutsel<br />- xclip<br /><br />Any other entry?caminatihttp://caminati.tknoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-78418888661542040102010-07-13T23:25:14.826+01:002010-07-13T23:25:14.826+01:00thanx man!thanx man!Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8567731656382992063.post-13852151536275305272010-05-23T15:46:51.949+01:002010-05-23T15:46:51.949+01:00xclip actually accepts option abbreviation; you ca...xclip actually accepts option abbreviation; you can use "-se" instead of "-select", as long as there's no other option starting with "se". (Currently there isn't. But "s" doesn't work because of "-silent".)<br />The same goes for primary/secondary/clipboard, so what you wrote as "xclip -selection clipboard -o" is really just "xclip -se c -o". (I prefer to write "-sel clip" anyway.)<br /><br />Also, "xsel -k" can be emulated by "xclip -o | xclip -i".<br /><br />I'm just saying these for the sake of correctness though. I just found out about xsel myfelf, and will probably switch for its other features.TaylanUBnoreply@blogger.com