You can just run mencoder or ffmpeg on the mp3 and mov on all the files (with a small shell script, probably involving 'find' or similar), just tell it to write the output to/dev/null, that should go through those files as fast at they can be read from disk and abort with error on those that are broken.
For the jpgs, you could try something similar with imagemagick's 'convert', to convert them to whatever format to/dev/null, which also needs to read the whole file content and aborts if they're broken (one should hope).
Those converters are really fast, especially ffmpeg, so that should complete in a reasonable time.
You can just run mencoder or ffmpeg on the mp3 and mov on all the files (with a small shell script, probably involving 'find' or similar), just tell it to write the output to /dev/null, that should go through those files as fast at they can be read from disk and abort with error on those that are broken.
For the jpgs, you could try something similar with imagemagick's 'convert', to convert them to whatever format to /dev/null, which also needs to read the whole file content and aborts if they're broken (one should hope).
Those converters are really fast, especially ffmpeg, so that should complete in a reasonable time.
Anyone remember the Shipstones from Heinlein's "Friday"?
They have these awesome enrichment centers :)
(And who needs stuxnet when you've got GlaDOS?)
The point is, it's none of anybody's business. Personal privacy is an important right to have, and your kind of talk just errodes it.
Maybe we should make movies like they did in the 70ies, like "Shaft", to empower geeks all the world over. Just call it "Shift" or something...
...Baidu prefers *you*!
All your pattern are belong to us?
Put a "laser" on the moon and demand 1 "million" dollars!
Ok, McDonalds, screws, whatever, you got those... But you forgot:
"Annual production of Lego bricks averages approximately 20 billion per year"