exifprobe
exiftags
exiftran
exiv2
fim
mediainfo (my favorite)
To install some of those, just install the following:
forensics-all
forensics-extra
exifprobe
exiftags
exiftran
exiv2
fim
mediainfo (my favorite)
To install some of those, just install the following:
forensics-all
forensics-extra
I recently bought a 5 TB USB3 hard disk to back up my data (mostly my photo and video files. I had a data disaster recently, so I bought the EaseUS disaster backup data recovery tool, but it required a huge amount of data to restore).
Out of the box, without paying attention to the factory default format it has (extFAT), the 5 TB space has only about 0.6 TB space left. I doubt I had that much-used data (as the source of the recovered data is from a 1 TB hard drive). After doing some investigation (the detail is down below), I found out that the allocation unit size (AUS) of the removable hard disk is pretty big, I think it is too big to storage average files. So I am in the process of backing up the data to my other hard drive (NTFS, 4k AUS), before I can reformat the drive to have a smaller AUS.
Meanwhile, I am not decided whether to stick with extFAT or change it to NTFS. I don't really care about portability to other OSes, especially Apple products (sorry MacOS!), as I am pretty much a Windows (plus Linux) user. Yes, I am all aware that so far Linux supports R/W to NTFS in userspace only (the kernel driver only supports read and some limited write access, but that requires some enabling). But, the good news is that, according to the recent news, a company called Paragon is willing to make its full-blown proprietary NTFS driver (which fully supports NTFS features) to the Linux community. The effort is planned to be available starting in Kernel 5.15. This will really boost the performance and features of NTFS in Linux.[1]
To have 256K AUS seems too expensive. According to [3] for Test 3 and 4 (Read & Write, 1 GB of data file), extFAT is slightly faster, but for smaller files (Test 1 and 2, 1 GB file size), NTFS prevails. For duplication or deletion (Test 8 and 9), NTFS is more than 1.60 faster than FAT32 and 1.3 faster than extFAT).
Some useful information:
For 2 TB to 16 TB hard drive, 4 KB AUS is enough for an NTFS-formatted hard drive.[2]
Disk Partition Information:
C:\Windows\System32>diskpart
Ref:
[1] Linux boosts Microsoft NTFS support as Linus Torvalds complains about GitHub merges | ZDNet
[2] Default cluster size for NTFS, FAT, and exFAT (microsoft.com)
[3] Flexense - Data Management Software - FAT32 vs. exFAT vs. NTFS USB3 Performance Comparison
I recently upgraded my Internet connection plan with Xfinity from Internet 200 Mbps plus TV to 900 Mbps Superfast plan (with TV plan dropped. Who cares with TV these days?). It was a good deal plan, as I now pay less with a lot faster nominal Internet speed.
In the beginning, after waiting an hour as told by the customer service, I saw the upstream speed improved to 20+ Mbps, but the upstream speed did not increase (stayed at around 140 Mbps). A few calls/chats with the customer service representatives (they sent a few update signals) and modem and router reboots nothing improved.
After the last call to them, they decided to send a technician to visit the next day. I had tried almost everything (except setting the router's settings to factory defaults). My home network setup is little bit complicated, with the AP router and DOCSIS 3.1 modem sitting in a mounted rack in the walking closet.
The coaxial cable from ISP is split through a 1-to-8 Moca-Ready splitter (5-2300 MHz, -11 dB drop between Out and In), because I need to connect the TV in the living room through MoCA as well as some bedrooms and home office. In the beginning, I thought the chocking was due to interference with MoCA (as the DOCSIS cable modem shared the same coax medium with MoCA modems). Not sure whether I still need to change that splitter (-11 dB drop is a little too much, not counting the bandwidth is only up to 2300, not 2400 or 2500 MHz. But when I checked the MoCA specs, the frequency span for MoCA 2.5 is from 1002 to 1675 MHz.)
Out of my patience (I use the Internet on a daily basis as part of Work From Home with Citrix connection, hence requires constant and speedy internet link), I decided to simplify the connection by removing the set-top box (which soon I'd return as I'd no longer have TV service), so the cable modem was wired directly to the ISP (not through splitter). This did not resolve the data rate, although it improved the SNR in the modem.
Out of my frustration, I factory reset my Synology Router Rt2600a and redid the speed test. And...voila! I got 700+ Mbps. Yes, it's still far from 900 Mbps as promised, but at least it's 4x faster than what I got before. Turned out, the "Threat Prevention" add-on feature in Synology Router was the culprit. It was CPU-intensive processing, which shouldn't be performed by a normal CPU, probably by a special or dedicated CPU doing this kind of inspection and prevention.
I still really need to have an intrusion prevention feature as it has been securing my home network heavily from hackers and spam. Perhaps it is time to shop for a dedicated intrusion prevention device.
System: Dell Precision WorkStation T3500 (all builds)
Motherboard: Dell 09KPNV
Memory: 5.6 GB free of 12 GB (6x2GB) @ 1.3 GHz DIMM DDR3-1333 (PC3-10600)
Display: 1920 x 1080 - 32 Bit colors, 1680 x 1050 - 32 Bit colors,
OS: Windows 10
BIOS Date: 20130528
CPU: Intel Xeon W3550 (QC, 8 threads @3.06 GHz)
Disk: Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 1TB
VGA: Dual NVidia Quadro NVS 420
Here is the list parts upgrades.
DO NOT mix E or U modules (E modules tend to run faster).
T3500 doesn't support registered modules (R modules!), and there is 6 Slots on the motherboard.
Max speed: 1333 MHz (PC10600)
Memory PN’s:
Recommended Memory configurations:
With Upgraded 700W EVG 700B Power Supply:
The motherboard doesn't support NVME protocol, so we cannot boot O/S from it that requires UEFI, which you're not going to find on any eight year old PC system. But NVME SSD can be used to store data after booting (e.g, just to store video game data).
NVME.2 SSD Adapter *Required to Install NVME.2*
Recommended NVME.2 SSDs:
- Heatsink compound Arctic Silver
M.2 is a form factor:
NVME SSD vs SATA SSD:
SATA III Hard Drive SATA III SSD NVMe SSD
export
ICAROOT=/opt/Citrix/ICAClient
Copy files in
/usr/share/ca-certificates/mozilla/* to
$ICAROOT/keystore/cacertsRehash the certificate by the following command: $ICAROOT/util/ctx_rehash
My Logitech USB Speakarphone has stopped working since I did something wrong (which I don't remember). Various troubleshooting and zillions of searches on the Internet did not fix the issue, until today.
The issue was the device did not make any sound at all. Checking via ALSA and Kernel log said everything was fine as shown below:
$ lsusb
...
Bus 002 Device 011: ID 046d:0a06 Logitech, Inc.
Bus 002 Device 009: ID 046d:c51c Logitech, Inc.
$ inxi -A
Audio: Device-1: Intel 82801I HD Audio driver: snd_hda_intel
Device-2: ViXS Systems XCode 2100 Series driver: N/A
Device-3: AMD Cape Verde/Pitcairn HDMI Audio [Radeon HD 7700/7800 Series] driver: snd_hda_intel
Device-4: Logitech type: USB driver: snd-usb-audio
Sound Server: ALSA v: k4.15.0-135-generic