From 6053d313ce3abe876c7d05574effab438ce5e410 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Zhiming Wang Date: Fri, 8 Jan 2016 11:21:54 -0800 Subject: Markdown source files: Use ... to end YAML metadata block Also add a newline after the metadata block. ... is easier on markdown-mode; if --- is used, the line immediately above it will be treated as a setext header and highlighted, which isn't so easy on the eyes. --- source/blog/2014-10-26-disk-visualizer-daisydisk.md | 3 ++- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'source/blog/2014-10-26-disk-visualizer-daisydisk.md') diff --git a/source/blog/2014-10-26-disk-visualizer-daisydisk.md b/source/blog/2014-10-26-disk-visualizer-daisydisk.md index 4c62b3ed..75d4aa4f 100644 --- a/source/blog/2014-10-26-disk-visualizer-daisydisk.md +++ b/source/blog/2014-10-26-disk-visualizer-daisydisk.md @@ -2,7 +2,8 @@ title: "Disk visualizer: DaisyDisk" date: 2014-10-26T00:02:22-0700 date_display: October 26, 2014 ---- +... + DaisyDisk is a pretty famous name. I’ve heard a lot that DaisyDisk is beautiful, but as a “power user” I always feel ashamed about using a disk analyzer or visualizer (although no one really cares). I’m pretty comfortable with doing most filesystem operations right in the shell, and for other tasks too tedious for the shell (like renaming a bunch of files with no obvious pattern), Finder (equipped with TotalFinder) works just fine. Today I was trying clean up my drive a bit, as there were only 22GB left. I knew where the main problem lied: a huge number of highres videos lying in `~/vid/staging`, awaiting renaming and migration to my external drive. Anyway, it would be nice to have some visualization of a detailed breakdown of my disk usage, preferably on any level I want without multiple passes of `du`. The name DaisyDisk popped up from the cache in my brain, so I headed over to their website to download it. -- cgit v1.2.1