Truecrypt Download Language Pack

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Sebrina Lobianco

unread,
Jan 18, 2024, 9:37:25 AM1/18/24
to headoctase

Based on what I have read (I haven't tried it myself) when you download the truecrypt file to your local machine, you should be able to mount it there and would be prompted for password. Once mounted, you should be able to write to or modify to your hearts content and then save to the encrypted volume you local machine. You will not be able to save the changes into the original server-based volume as that file is 'read only'. However, you should be able to save your modified volume to the server under a different file name.

truecrypt download language pack


DOWNLOAD === https://t.co/MG1semHt4Y



I backed up a bunch of personal stuff, school work, music, etc. from my old NTFS truecrypt volume yesterday and reformatted the whole drive (it had multiple partitions before) to one encrypted ext3 partition / TC volume.

i've tried it a few times, and have even rebooted . . . i am using the truecrypt GUI that launches automatically . . . i am not sure if i need to change anything with that . . . i've been using 4 different NTFS or FAT32 tc volumes over the past year with arch and the gui, and have never had a problem . . . i've never had to tweak or modify anything

EDIT: i did some investigating as per your posts, and the /media/truecrypt1 directory was changed to user/owner: root root instead of: myuser/users . . . i did chown and chmod and it's working now :S

If any state-sponsored hacking group becomes the only one coding effectively in one particular language, I don't see how. Being fluent becomes your native tongue rather easily, which denial becomes quite difficult in the voice-powered realm. (Like they're not from Boston when I asked them to park the car.)

Indeed the language used by these malware authors is D, and yes it is an old language. I guess the reporter just found the website (dlang.org) and assumed that was the actual name of the language, and they didn't even read the web site to find out that D has been around for decades. And of course Google is partly to blame because it's impossible to find one-letter or even two-letter languages without adding "lang" to the query. Google must special case "C" and their own languages like "Go."

It's the language you're thinking of. It has become fashionable to put Lang on the end, probably because simply searching for "D" or "Go" doesn't really yield very good results. You can blame search engines for the stupid convention. Even website host names reflect this trendy "lang" suffix, D [dlang.org], Nim [nim-lang.org], Zig [ziglang.org], etc...

I use Audacity 1.3.9 to process .wav recordings (14.1 kHz/16 bit) of conversation in an endangered indigenous language. The recordings will be archived. As part of preparing these recordings for archiving, I sometimes need to obscure short sections of the recording for reasons of sensitivity or privacy. Is it possible to use Audacity to add a white noise overlay to the sections I wish to obscure? (And ideally, is there a way to do this so that the noise-overlay is reversible 50 years hence, allowing obscured sections to be recoverable in cases where such sensitivity eventually lapses?) Thank you!

ImportJava=false
; If true, it will import the Java plugin from a copy of Java Portable if you
; have it installed, and if you do not already have a Java plugin installed in
; Google Chrome Portable. Note that Java Portable is not yet supported; the
; plugin will attempt to use a locally installed Java.
UsePAMLanguage=true
; Forces Google Chrome to use the language selected by PortableApps.com Menu
; when it is launched from PAM. The language is only used if Google Chrome
; supports it, otherwise it falls back to the user-selected language (or
; the local system language). If "true", you won't be able to change the
; language within Google Chrome when launched from PAM since PAM will override
; it.

df19127ead
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages