> Thus if I have three JPG images in a directory named:
> FSMHSusNM131_N2.jpg
> FSMusNM131_G8.jpg
> FSMHSusNM132_N5.jpg
> (and I do,) then I can select any one of these
> using at most two keypresses and two arrowkeys.
> On Linux, If I were to do anything to the third file, I would have to type FSMH(tab)2(tab) while
> squinting to see what was different about the filenames.
Assuming those are the only files in the directory, to select the 3rd file, I would just
press alt-g (I have alt-g bound to menu-complete backwards in bash).
If there were other files just do FSM(alt-g), or FSM(alt-v)(alt-v) for the 2nd file, etc.
> I know enough people who'd say, just the running commentary is a big enough feature to make the format attractive.
SVCD allows a secondary audio track, ripping commentary as the 2nd audio track is easy.
Deleted scenes and what not can easily be ripped as extra tracks on the SVCD as well.
For the other extra features like bios and what not, I'd rather just look at imdb anyway..
> Thus if I have three JPG images in a directory named:
> FSMHSusNM131_N2.jpg
> FSMusNM131_G8.jpg
> FSMHSusNM132_N5.jpg
> (and I do,) then I can select any one of these
> using at most two keypresses and two arrowkeys.
> On Linux, If I were to do anything to the third file, I would have to type FSMH(tab)2(tab) while
> squinting to see what was different about the filenames.
Assuming those are the only files in the directory, to select the 3rd file, I would just
press alt-g (I have alt-g bound to menu-complete backwards in bash).
If there were other files just do FSM(alt-g), or FSM(alt-v)(alt-v) for the 2nd file, etc.
www.disksdirect.com has cdrw blanks for $2 each...