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Open a file explorer on a split screen inside your vim session
Open a CLI file explorer by splitting up your screen inside your vim session. Besides, you probably are never going to forget this one.

show git logging
shows some logging for the git repo.

Write comments to your history.
A null operation with the name 'comment', allowing comments to be written to HISTFILE. Prepending '#' to a command will *not* write the command to the history file, although it will be available for the current session, thus '#' is not useful for keeping track of comments past the current session.

check open ports without netstat or lsof

Find out how old a web page is
I used to use the Firefox "View page info" feature a lot to determine how stale the web page I was looking at was. Now that I use mostly Chrome I miss that feature, so here is a command line alternative using wget. The -S says to display the server response, the --spider says to not download any files/pages, just fetch the header. The output goes to stderr, so to grep it you use 2>&1 to combine the stderr stream with stdout, the pipe that to grep for Last-Modified. You can use curl instead if you have it installed, like this: $ curl --head -s http://osswin.sourceforge.net | grep Mod

Selecting a random file/folder of a folder
Also looks in subfolders

Console clock
Shows a simple clock in the console -t param removes the watch header Ctrl-c to exit

list the top 15 folders by decreasing size in MB
list the top 15 folders by decreasing size in MB

Convert CSV to JSON
Replace 'csv_file.csv' with your filename.

List the files any process is using
List the files a process is using.


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