What it fails to do, in particular, is raise the emotional temperature. We look from the outside in at an affair that remains enigmatic a fuzzy recollection of teenage impressions, intense, out of reach, unexplained.Īmy Hollinshead and Kieran Brown in The Lover. A collaboration between choreographer Fleur Darkin and director Jemima Levick, using the combined forces of Scottish Dance Theatre, the Stellar Quines company and the Lyceum, the production uses dancers to turn the audience into voyeurs. So there is a logic to presenting this stage adaptation not as a straight play but as a dance-theatre hybrid. He asks her whether she is attracted to him only for his money it isn’t quite her reason, but it’s as good as any. He is prone to weeping and feels oppressed by his father. He is Chinese and the son of a millionaire. Whether because of her age at the time or the passing decades since, Duras gives us the scantest details about the girl’s lover. “I’m used to people looking at me,” she writes, knowing her attractiveness is not in what she says or does, but in what others see in her.Īnd it works two ways. Looking back at her 15-year-old self living in what was French Indochina, when she engaged in an illicit affair with a man 12 years her senior, the author sees a girl whose sexual desirability is in her very presence. Use fls -m X: /dev/sda3 x-y-z | mactime -b - to get listing of directory you are interested in.T here’s a theme in Marguerite Duras’ semi-autobiographical novel about the objectifying gaze. In case of NTFS there is a 3-number combination like x-y-z designating file ID in the filesystem.
You'll see also a lot of maintenance data stores which are normally hidden in windows explorer. Because files can be born and modified in separate times, you'll see some same filenames on separate lines.įor example, use fls -m X: /dev/sda3 | mactime -b - to get listing of the top directory, sorted in time. Mactime puts all files to timeline, marking when each of them was modified ( m), accessed ( a), (attribute-)changed ( c) or born ( b). Also, using mactime to process output can be helpful to navigate to relevant dirs/files. Try using fls in more interactive way, just like ls. If you use fls -r, then it will go recursively through all the directories, which might not be exactly what you need for your goal here.
What other software can I try besides TestDisk and Sleuthkit? Grep -b 'search-text' /dev/partition > file.txt is used to search I am also curious to know if these two links to How-to really work? How can I figure out which files are my most recently deleted ones,Ĭan I find out and recover my most recently deleted directories Time shown by TestDisk is 3 20:53, which is not today when
Update date and time before deletion? (Note the most recent date and Does it mean the deletion date and time or last When I hit a and then C to select and copy all the selectedįiles, files named inode_xxxxxx will be copied to a directory thatĪlso, I don't know the meaning of the date and time for each file Use : to select the current file, a to select/deselect all files,Ĭ to copy the selected files, c to copy the current file, q to quit Shown in the picture in the link, but files named by inode Is shown by TestDisk is not the deleted file/directory names as To recover the deleted directories and the files in them. I installed TestDisk 6.13 via apt-get install, and followed Identify most recently deleted directories and files in my case? Now I wonder if my usage of sleuthkit is the quickest way to It hasn't finished running yet (don't know when it will), and the file ~/deleted_files.txt is still empty.Īll my work has been stalled since I don't dare to write ~/deleted_files.txt for almost a week on my 110GB 96%-used ntfs I have been running sudo fls -f ntfs -d -r -p /dev/sda3 >
I have also tried to use Sleuthkit, but I cannot figure out how to
Note that the partition is NTFS, shared between Windows 7 and Ubuntu 12.04.įollowing is different software that I have tried so far. I wonder what ways I can try to recover them? I haven't written any new data to that partition yet since the deletion. In Nautilus under Ubuntu 12.04, I accidentally selected several directories on a partition and deleted them at once (unfortunately, I deleted them by Shift+Delete such that they don't remain in Trash).