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As life goes, I'm progressively migrating from 98 SE (no longer a prime target!) to Linux, and one of the most comfortable parts of the Old Shoe is the imho superb shareware file manager, Total Commander by Christian Ghisler. (I gladly paid his modest sum.) As much as any part of my old environment, that's one app. I really hate to leave behind. (Yes, I'm aware of Wine, C.O., and Win4Lin, etc.) So far, I've tried: @ mc (still use it, but it's sometimes distressingly idiosyncratic; simply changing a filename without doing a [move] is a mini-education in Unix, almost...) Also ugly, sorry to say, in default form. (I do care about appearance.) Nevertheless, as it now stands, it's quite a nice piece of work. @ Nautilus (*What* are they thinking?) ... Abandoned, quickly. @ TkDesk (no, it's not a twin-pane source/destination setup; has other virtues (and a phenomenally-persistent toolbar!)) @ Gnome Commander -- more like it, but development ceased a while back, and it didn't do enough of what I wanted. So far. [emelFM] I have a lot more hope for something called emelFM, which iirc I found via the app. list in Synaptic, perhaps by using its Search function. Odd name, but would Unix have even survived if it had Colorless Corporate Names (CCN) for everything? (I'm still trying to accept "noatun" and "defoma" as routine. "Noatun" looks so odd, to me, that it haunts me, just a tad.) "Vista": I'm underwhelmed. emelFM is written by Michael Clark, apparently at the U. of Pittsburgh, who seems to be quite self-effacing; no Help-->About info. in it. It's a nicely-developed twin-pane Norton Commander descendant, with a bunch of quite-useful "button" widgets that do good and useful things, such as simple H buttons that toggle display of hidden files. It has an [mc]-style command line, with something like Ctrl-o toggling of a "built-in terminal". (Try Ctrl-z, instead; the "keys" list is a bit outdated.) {some details} The default layout is twin-pane, side by side, with maybe the lower quarter being a full-width "terminal output" space. (If you take the hint, and ask for the key bindings, surely enough, lots of Good Stuff scrolls past. No piping to [less], either; doesn't work. Reminds me of Moss Doss. However: Grab the divider, and raise the output area until you can see all the key commands (I hope! Spoiled utterly rotten, running at 1280 x 1024). Try a Ctrl-z. Look down in the lower-left corner, where you'll see a [^] in a little outline. That also toggles the "terminal". It's extensible and configurable, and works the way I want a file manager to work. I'm about to send a message of thanks to Michael. A few, still to investigate are: Worker, by Ralf Hoffmann, of Germany: <http://www.boomerangsworld.de/worker/> It looks good, and is being maintained/developed. Googling on [worker ralf hoffmann] gave some hopeful-looking hits. Gentoo (yes, the name of a file manager): Author is Emil Brink; it's not as easy to find, and iirc, the developer's own page for it was lost. Sourceforge seems to have been a priceless archive in that event. <http://freshmeat.net/projects/gentoo> There's a [.rpm]; for Debian, <http://packages.debian.org/unstable/X11/gentoo.html> is a page to get you close. FileRunner looked good (especially for FTP), but its author seems to have abandoned it in 1999. Best regards, -- Nicholas Bodley /\ @ /\ Waltham, Mass. Sent by Opera e-mail in Libranet GNU/Linux 3.0 Midnight hacker in 1960
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