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#26446 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: The Beaten Path, USA, Roundworld, This Side of Infinity
Device: Kindle Touch fw5.3.7 (Wifi only)
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#26447 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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Karma: 85400180
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: The Beaten Path, USA, Roundworld, This Side of Infinity
Device: Kindle Touch fw5.3.7 (Wifi only)
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![]() But while I could totally hear offloading the cache to a ramdisk, how much faster is the profile itself going to get? And is it worth it even for the annoyance? As for me, losing my profile would be a bit more than an annoyance. ![]() ... On the matter of zipping vs. copying, I can't help but wonder whether something like rsync would be more efficient than either. |
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#26448 | ||||
New York Editor
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Karma: 16540415
Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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If the profile was located on the SSD, the answer would be "not much at all". But it doesn't live there. This machine has both SSD and HD, is is set up so that most data lives on the HD. I've never cared for Mozilla's defaults in where it puts things, like burying the profile in a hidden directory under the user's login directory. I use custom profiles, and I use Profile Manager to specify what they are called and where they live. There's a \Mozilla directory on the HD, with related stuff beneath it: Code:
\Mozilla Extensions Firefox SeaMonkey Thunderbird Profiles Firefox SeaMonkey Thunderbird (It's a bit more complex, but you get the general idea...) Since the profile is constantly open and read from/written to while FF is active, ramdisk is an improvement over HD. Whether it's enough of an improvement is an open question. At some point, I may just move the profile to SSD, leave only the cache on the ramdisk, and see what happens. Quote:
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On the old machine, the script that stored the profile back to archive did things like create several days worth of named backups, so I could potentially delete the copy on the ramdisk and restart from an earlier version. (I made use of that on occasion when something I did in a session corrupted the profile.) ______ Dennis |
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#26449 | |
(he/him/his)
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Sunshine Coast, BC
Device: Oasis (Gen3),Paperwhite (Gen10), Voyage, Paperwhite(orig), iPad Air M3
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The incremental value of a RAMDisk over an SSD is trivial and could actually be a detriment if not sized perfectly, since Windows is actually quite smart about using available RAM for caching. |
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#26450 | |||
New York Editor
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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AFAIK, hard link support first appeared in NTFS5, which was not the first iteration of NTFS to reach the world. IIRC, WindowsNT 3.51 had NTFS4. Quote:
Mklink is a built-in on Win7/8/10, but not prior, and is a command line tool. The advantage to LSE is integration with Windows Explorer. And who uses Power Shell who isn't a developer or sysadmin? ![]() Quote:
______ Dennis |
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#26451 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Utrecht, the Netherlands
Device: Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition
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One of the restaurants around the corner from us has been sold and the new owners have started to renovate the building this week.
On Wednesday and Thursday they started around the time I get up at 8am. Our house is very deep and the back of our house is right next to that restaurant. This morning, however, they started in the attic shortly after 6am. The problem: my bedroom neighbours their attic. I do have to admit that there is one good thing coming from this renovation. It seems like the students living over the restaurant have been (temporarily?) kicked out. |
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#26452 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 34000001
Join Date: Mar 2008
Device: KPW1, KA1
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You could also start Firefox using a batch script that opens and saves the archive as soon as Firefox starts and closes. Then you won't even need a startup or shutdown script. (Or are you doing this already? I am assuming the startup and shutdown scripts run when starting and stopping the computer.) |
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#26453 | ||
New York Editor
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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While you can create a ramdisk on Linux, I haven't. And while Windows has Task Scheduler, that's not what I use. Win7 Pro includes Group Policy Editor, and GPO can define things that run on boot and on shutdown. A GPO script loads the ramdisk on boot, and another stores the contents back to zip files on shutdown. The latter is the critical bit. I don't know of a way to set something up in Task Scheduler that happens on shutdown/reboot. Quote:
And I probably could use a batch file wrapper, but it would be complicated by the fact that the same technique is applied to SeaMonkey and Thunderbird, and there are several versions of Firefox - release, developer edition, and nightly. (Not impossible, though. I've done similar things with variables to specify targets. Hmmm...) ______ Dennis |
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#26454 | ||
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: The Beaten Path, USA, Roundworld, This Side of Infinity
Device: Kindle Touch fw5.3.7 (Wifi only)
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The only Ubuntu mention is about a dual boot. ![]() Quote:
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#26455 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Device: KPW1, KA1
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I'm still wondering why someone would go through the aggravation of setting up a RAM-disk for the Firefox profile... |
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#26456 | ||||
(he/him/his)
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Sunshine Coast, BC
Device: Oasis (Gen3),Paperwhite (Gen10), Voyage, Paperwhite(orig), iPad Air M3
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No, and not going to bother going to look it up. I personally created hard links in NT 4 and in Windows 2000, Server 2003, and XP. It was fairly hidden in earlier versions (I used Interix to do it in NT4/2000 though there was a resource kit tool that would do it as well, IIRC), but I have been personally told by one of the original NTFS developers that the capability was always there, just not exposed.
First use of symlinks that I'm aware of was Interix (a third party UNIX / POSIX subsystem that MS then bought), and then in Microsoft Services for UNIX (when they included the Interix subsystem in SFU). The hard links that Interix/SFU created were visible to the Windows user, but the symlinks were NOT (though, curiously, the junctions were). Symlinks that were visible to the Windows user were added in Vista, and exposed in Windows 7. (On a side note, the mount points or junctions that SFU/Interix created were visible to the Windows user, but they were BUGGY as all get out. They used "reparse points" and these weren't properly handled until the Vista/7 version of NTFS. This also affected the NFS file system, by the way.) Quote:
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![]() FWIW, I've been using PowerShell since before there was a public beta of Monad. And I was a hard core Korn shell user before that, even in Windows. Quote:
![]() And all of this is completely off-topic for this (admittedly broad) thread. ![]() |
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#26457 |
Illiterate
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Karma: 37848716
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: The Sandwich Isles
Device: Samsung Galaxy S10+, Microsoft Surface Pro
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Yawn... everything I didn't want to know 'bout RAM drives and browsers.
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#26458 | |||
New York Editor
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Device: PalmTX, Pocket eDGe, Alcatel Fierce 4, RCA Viking Pro 10, Nexus 7
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Quote:
Next step on that path would be having the Mozilla profiles set up so the same one would be used from either OS. (Ubuntu can see the Windows file system via ntfs3g. I have an open source driver that lets Windows see the ext4 partition Ubuntu lives on. But the path of least resistance would be accessing the Windows files from Linux.) Quote:
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Aggravation is what occurs when the content of the ramdisk gets trashed and the source it was loaded from isn't fully current. ![]() ______ Dennis |
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#26459 |
Wizard
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Karma: 83407757
Join Date: Mar 2011
Device: Kindle Paperwhite, Lenovo Duet Chromebook, Moto e
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I have once again failed to win the Powerball.
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#26460 |
Wizard
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Join Date: Mar 2011
Device: Kindle Paperwhite, Lenovo Duet Chromebook, Moto e
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I want tattoos but have 3 problems: 1) Pain. I might have them start on me only to have to quit before they finish the tatt. 2) $$$ 3) Bicuspid Aortic Valve. I have one. I understand tatts are problematic with BAV and you need to talk to the Dr. and be on antibiotics. to get a tattoo.
That being said, I keep getting good ideas. 1. “Vulnerant omnes, ultima necat.” (All [hours] wound, the last kills.) -Old saying on Roman clocks, popularized by Neil Gaiman in American Gods. 2. Another Latin by way of Gaiman: Omnia mutantur, nihil interit (from Ovid, popularized in Sandman. It means everything changes, nothing perishes). 3. A butterfly of some kind. 4. My cat (done like one of these but Cinder is a tortoiseshell) http://hellogiggles.com/raddest-cat-tattoos/ 5. A bowl of pertunias with "oh no, not again" under it (from Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy). 6. These birds my great grandmother drew as a child 7. "All life is One" from Bryson's A Brief History of Everything with a small globe. 8. "What is any ocean but a multitude of drops" from Cloud Atlas (with raindrops or something). 9. A half-read book is a half-finished love affair from Cloud Atlas. With a book. 10. If I do get a tattoo, I'll probably start with a semi-colon (small, simple, probably inexpensive). Last edited by covingtoncat73; 09-25-2015 at 06:29 PM. |
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creepy crawlers!, dell computers, monteverdi, thread that never ends, tubery, unutterable silliness |
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