All Articles

Ordered by Date Published : Year: "2013" Month: "11" Day: "26"
Page: 1 (of 0)

Total Articles in this collection: 2

Navigation Help at the bottom of the page
Article: Episode #172: Who said bigger is better? - published over 10 years ago.
Content: Tim sweats the small stuff Ted S. writes in: "I have a number of batch scripts which turn a given input file into a configurable amount of versions, all of which will contain identical data content, but none of which, ideally, contain the same byte content. My problem is, how do I, using *only* XP+ cmd (no other scripting - PowerShell, jsh, wsh, &c), ...
http://blog.commandlinekungfu.com/2013/11/episode-172-who-said-bigger-is-better.html   
Published: 2013 11 26 09:18:00
Received: 2023 03 31 08:44:32
Feed: Command Line Kung Fu
Source: Command Line Kung Fu
Category: News
Topic: Security Tooling
Article: Episode #172: Who said bigger is better? - published over 10 years ago.
Content: Tim sweats the small stuff Ted S. writes in: "I have a number of batch scripts which turn a given input file into a configurable amount of versions, all of which will contain identical data content, but none of which, ideally, contain the same byte content. My problem is, how do I, using *only* XP+ cmd (no other scripting - PowerShell, jsh, wsh, &c), ...
http://blog.commandlinekungfu.com/2013/11/episode-172-who-said-bigger-is-better.html   
Published: 2013 11 26 09:18:00
Received: 2023 03 31 08:44:32
Feed: Command Line Kung Fu
Source: Command Line Kung Fu
Category: News
Topic: Security Tooling

All Articles

Ordered by Date Published : Year: "2013" Month: "11" Day: "26"
Page: 1 (of 0)

Total Articles in this collection: 2


  • "All Articles" links back to the front page, effectivly the Planet "Home Page"; shows all articles, with no selections, or groupings.
  • Default date ordering is by "Received Date" (due to not all RSS feeds having a "Published Date").
  • Only Published Date selections use the articles Published Date.
  • The first page always shows fifty items plus from zero to up to a remaining forty-nine items, before they are commited permently to the next page.
  • All subsequent pages show fifty items.
  • Pagination is in reverse ordering (so that pages are permamenent links, aka "permalinks", to their content).
  • "<<" moves you to the first page (aka newest articles)
  • ">>" moves you to the last page (aka oldest articles)
  • "<" moves you to the previous page (aka newer articles)
  • ">" moves you to the next page (aka older articles)
  • Return to the top of this page Go Now

Custom HTML Block

Click to Open Code Editor