Here are some really useful command line shortcuts that I found on a forum awhile back but don't remember now: F1 Repeats the letters of the last command line, one by one F2 Displays a dialog asking user to "enter the char to copy up to" of the last command line F3 Repeats the last command line F4 Displays a dialog asking user to "enter the char to delete up to" of the last command line F5 Goes back one command line F6 Enters the traditional CTRL+Z (^z) F7 Displays a menu with the command line history F8 Cycles back through previous command lines (beginning with most recent) F9 Displays a dialog asking user to enter a command number, where 0 is for first command line entered
Windows version of Unix dd command. Safe, effort-free backup for FAT, FAT32, NTFS, ext2, ext3 partitions. used to copy regions of raw device files, e.g. backing up the boot sector of a hard disk, or to read fixed amounts of data from special file
S. Shiel, and I. Bayley. Electronic Notes in Theoretical Computer Science, 141 (1):
35--52(2005)Proceedings of the First Workshop on Bytecode Semantics, Verification, Analysis and Transformation (Bytecode 2005).