![]() ![]() ![]() Long live GN'R (with or without Slash)!! Finck for Senator!! Axl for President!! \m/ \m/ Back on topic now. Stay tuned for the upcoming Chinese Democracy CD coming up this fall/winter after more than 10 years in captivity without hearing a single word or note from them lool. But I also love the commercial ones like SCOM, November Rain, Nightrain, Yesterdays, etc. My personal best would be WTTJ, Coma, Estranged and Paradise City all the way long. I have gathered some high quality videos (720x480) of their performances at Rock AM Roing, Hammerstein Ballroom, Download Festival, etc. I was there in Rock in Rio this year and may I say "what a performance."! TV broadcast did a lousy job and those who only followed it through the tube have a very pale image of what these new GN'R are capable of doing even if most of the time they are still playing old stuff. I loved it in my teens and I still love it now that I'm in my thirties. Yep, GN'R ain't merely *the* most dangerous rock band of all time. Sorry 'bout that mate and keep up your excellent work on hashcheck and cmdopen. Am I using/installing hashcheck in the wrong way or is this ok? I'm fine with hashcheck's speed but the hashtab speed comparison was inevitable and the results are quite conclusive. Speaking of hashtab, I wouldn't like this to turn into a hashcheck vs hashtab thread just because of my comparison but I have to ask this: is it normal for hashcheck to be a whole lot slower than hashtab when reading a file to show hashes? I've made a lot of trials with both hashtab and hashcheck on their x86 versions (hashtab v2.3.0 vs hashcheck v2.1.11) and hashtab always wins and most of the times it wins for more than a couple of seconds per 20 megabytes hashed. Although there is already a feature that highlights a matching hash I'd say that a green icon right next to it "à lá" hashtab would make it a killer app. Hi there code65536, Excellent tool and excellent features! I do miss one thing: a green check mark right next to one of the hashes when I paste a hash which matches the ones found by hashcheck. ![]()
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