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Hazel noodlesoft how to compress files
Hazel noodlesoft how to compress files






hazel noodlesoft how to compress files
  1. #HAZEL NOODLESOFT HOW TO COMPRESS FILES PDF#
  2. #HAZEL NOODLESOFT HOW TO COMPRESS FILES UPGRADE#
  3. #HAZEL NOODLESOFT HOW TO COMPRESS FILES ISO#

It doesn't need to be an ISO standard to be recognized as a standard that everyone should learn. It doesn't get much more standard than a "Downloads" folder in your user directory. > Just to be clear, you're talking about a de facto standard and nothing more. Recognizing there is a disconnect is the first step towards creating better systems and educational material for those systems. I don't understand how recognizing that makes me arrogant. It's a simple fact that most people don't take the time to sit down and understand the systems they use. Operations = heat maps, log dumps, baselines, WIP documentation. Finally, I have a ~/.scratch directory where I put text files I use to take notes, short scripts I write to test something, and other files I only need for a short time. The only other two (non-hidden) directories I keep in my home directory are ~/dotfiles (which is a private GitHub repo that I symlink my dotfiles from) and ~/code, which has subdirectories for various categories (`forks`, `scripts`, `projects`, `scratch`, and maybe a few others I'm forgetting). I try to keep my ~/Downloads directory fairly clean, and move things to the trash liberally (through trashcli) once my initial use is finished so that I can still access them later if I need to. I tend to try to keep most things in my directory that's sync'd to cloud storage (previously Dropbox, now Nextcloud since Dropbox doesn't support non-ext4 on Linux) ~/Documents and ~/Pictures are both symlinks into that folder so that I don't have to keep track of which machine something is on. I have a fairly specific system that I've developed, mostly due to my being fairly anal about not wanting to leave random files lying around after I'm done with them and wanting to keep as little as possible in my home directory. I also have a truckload of media (games, movies, music) stored on external hard drives since there's not much room for it on the internal SSD. ~/Music -> mostly just iTunes doing its thing ~/Desktop/old -> the "junk drawer" i occasionally clean out.

#HAZEL NOODLESOFT HOW TO COMPRESS FILES PDF#

~/Dropbox/pdfs -> web pages i've "printed" to pdf for archiving/reference. ~/Dropbox/ebooks -> organized into subdirs by topic ~/Dropbox/work -> subdirs per client/employer ~/Dropbox/personal -> scanned documents, receipts, etc ~/proj -> all my current projects and stuff i've pulled down from GitHub so I can examine it. Makes dir structure a bit less relevant with z the distance between any two dirs is effectively constant.īy project, by tool? What do you do with pdfs and reference stuff, surely not Dewey Decimal? One thing that changed my life is z, a utility to navigate easily to arbitrary directories based on frecency. I plan on anonymising and documenting as many of these cases as I can on the site.

hazel noodlesoft how to compress files

My personal life, including managing the limited company that I contract through. Running 2nd level desktop support for an international packaging company.

#HAZEL NOODLESOFT HOW TO COMPRESS FILES UPGRADE#

Running an infrastructure upgrade project for a major bank. Consolidating 200+ data centres in to 7 I did basically all of the hardware from procurement to having a green light on a NIC. Managing a 2 year contemporary dance production, multiple locations, staff, ticketing, marketing, etc. For instance, 50-59 is Johnny.Decimal itself. My home system has 10-19 capturing all of my 'personal, daily life' which leaves plenty of areas for my personal projects. Each gets its own system, nice and simple. It's not one I personally have come across yet as I tend to have quite distinct 'domains' that don't change much.Īt work, I'm a contractor and I typically spend 1-3 years on a project. Which is easy to do, compared to trying to face a mound of 400 files with names like "TEST.txt". And that's currently at my peak I'm about to go through and clear out about 20 of those things. Now? My current ~/Downloads is at 76 items after two years. used to be filled with easily 400 files and folders each. But that has the knock-on effect that it is now less daunting to go through and sweep up ~/Downloads.Įmpirically, my ~/Downloads, ~/old.Downloads, etc. Obviously there's less junk in ~/Downloads in general. Most of the time, I didn't need it, and so it gets thrown out as it should. I know I can grab it from the Trash if I need it again, which I've done a few times. Now I just delete those "I might need this." files. (Note, this is a rolling empty not an "empty everything every month" kind of deal). The trick? A Trash that automatically empties items older than 30 days. Sorting by Date Added its now piled under 10 other items. Then a week goes by, I've forgotten its there. I might need this again" and leave it there. What used to happen was I'd download, say, an Ubuntu image, use it, and then say ". I'm in a similar boat, and I'll mention one "weird trick" that has helped me.








Hazel noodlesoft how to compress files