Han-Chiuan Luo, Ph.D. (羅漢全博士) 台灣大學資訊工程博士, 淡水商工(高職)資料處理科專任教師,淡江大學兼任助理教授。
2014年3月29日 星期六
2014年3月24日 星期一
2014年3月17日 星期一
2014年3月12日 星期三
How To: Transfer your PuTTY settings between computers
Putty stores all configuration into registry ([HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SimonTatham\PuTTY])
How To: Transfer your PuTTY settings between computers
by Grant Robertson on February 1, 2007 at 04:00 PM
PuTTY
is tops on the short list of applications I install first on any
Windows machine. Over the years I've used PuTTY, I've installed it on a
huge number of computers but I've always had one complaint; There isn't a configuration file I can backup or move to a new machine.
Getting all the little comfort settings correct for each SSH connection can be a pain. The third time you set emulation, keys, encryption type, etc. for each machine you regularly access, you lose patience. The fifth time you find yourself re-entering settings you might do what I did, find a better way.
Moving PuTTy settings between computers is an easy task once you know what's involved. We'll find the registry keys where PuTTy stores its configuration information and export them to a file. We'll then use that file we've made to import our configuration on the target machine.
Exporting Your PuTTy Configuration
Putty stores its settings in the Windows registry. To save a backup of your Putty settings, you'll need to export this registry key to a file.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\ SimonTatham
(Simon Tatham is the original developer responsible for PuTTy)
1. Click Start->Run and type "RegEdt32" in the "Open" dialog. Click "Ok"
2. One RegEdt32 starts, you'll be presented with an application which looks something like:
3. Press "Ctrl+F" to bring up the Find dialog. Enter the name of the key, "SimonTratham" in the "Find What" field, and make sure only "Keys" is checked in the "Look At" section of the dialog. Finally, click "Find Next"
4. The search may take a while, reminding us that the Windows Registry is a large and mysterious place where dragons be. Let's use these few seconds to reflect on the fact that you should never, ever, never change things in the registry unless you are absolutely, positively, totally, completely, 100%dead sure that you know exactly what you're doing. When the search completes we'll see the key name for which we're looking.
5. Click File->Export. Give your file an appropriate name like, "putty.reg" and click "Save"
6. We're done! Save the putty.reg file somewhere safe. The file doesn't contain any passwords or actual SSH key values so, it's relatively safe from prying eyes. Still, it does contain your configuration and that kind of data is a private matter.
Importing Your PuTTy Configuration
To import your saved PuTTy configuration on any other Windows computer simply copy your exported registry key, right click on the file and click "Merge"
Windows will ask you for confirmation that you want to import this set of registry values. We know this file is safe, because we created it but, you should never import registry information from an unknown source.
That's all you need to know about moving your PuTTy configuration from one machine to another. This can be really useful information when upgrading to a new PC or, if you're an office IT guy where your users all have a standard list of servers they need to connect via SSH, you can create a reference configuration on once machine and "share" it between every computer in the office.
Getting all the little comfort settings correct for each SSH connection can be a pain. The third time you set emulation, keys, encryption type, etc. for each machine you regularly access, you lose patience. The fifth time you find yourself re-entering settings you might do what I did, find a better way.
Moving PuTTy settings between computers is an easy task once you know what's involved. We'll find the registry keys where PuTTy stores its configuration information and export them to a file. We'll then use that file we've made to import our configuration on the target machine.
Exporting Your PuTTy Configuration
Putty stores its settings in the Windows registry. To save a backup of your Putty settings, you'll need to export this registry key to a file.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\
(Simon Tatham is the original developer responsible for PuTTy)
1. Click Start->Run and type "RegEdt32" in the "Open" dialog. Click "Ok"
2. One RegEdt32 starts, you'll be presented with an application which looks something like:
3. Press "Ctrl+F" to bring up the Find dialog. Enter the name of the key, "SimonTratham" in the "Find What" field, and make sure only "Keys" is checked in the "Look At" section of the dialog. Finally, click "Find Next"
4. The search may take a while, reminding us that the Windows Registry is a large and mysterious place where dragons be. Let's use these few seconds to reflect on the fact that you should never, ever, never change things in the registry unless you are absolutely, positively, totally, completely, 100%dead sure that you know exactly what you're doing. When the search completes we'll see the key name for which we're looking.
5. Click File->Export. Give your file an appropriate name like, "putty.reg" and click "Save"
6. We're done! Save the putty.reg file somewhere safe. The file doesn't contain any passwords or actual SSH key values so, it's relatively safe from prying eyes. Still, it does contain your configuration and that kind of data is a private matter.
Importing Your PuTTy Configuration
To import your saved PuTTy configuration on any other Windows computer simply copy your exported registry key, right click on the file and click "Merge"
Windows will ask you for confirmation that you want to import this set of registry values. We know this file is safe, because we created it but, you should never import registry information from an unknown source.
That's all you need to know about moving your PuTTy configuration from one machine to another. This can be really useful information when upgrading to a new PC or, if you're an office IT guy where your users all have a standard list of servers they need to connect via SSH, you can create a reference configuration on once machine and "share" it between every computer in the office.
2014年3月7日 星期五
自主學習的教育革命 TEDxTaipei
肯‧羅賓森爵士在 TED「推動學習革命」演講中重要的一段話:
『所以我想我們得換個比喻,我們必須脫離工業模式的教育,或說生產模式,脫離那種線性思維、強調從眾和標準化的教育。
我們的教育必須轉型,以務農的原則為基礎,也就是瞭解一個人的成長,並不是機械化的過程。而是自然多元,沒辦法預知發展的結果,只能像農夫一樣,打造良好的條件,幫助幼苗成長茁壯。』
自主學習的教育革命 TEDxTaipei 系列影片:
Ken Robinson – 掀起學習革命
Sugata Mitra – 當孩子們自主學習
Salman Khan – 影片引發的教育新可能
Daphne Koller – 世界級的免費線上課程
E.O. Wilson – 給年輕科學家的建議
自主學習的教育革命(http://tedxtaipei.com/2012/09/education/)
Ken Robinson – 掀起學習革命
我們面臨了環境危機,自然資源正在耗竭,Ken Robinson 警告大家:人力資源也正在耗竭!只有很少部份的人找到自己的天賦,天賦往往埋藏的很深。教育應該是一個協助發現天賦的過程,但現在所作的剛好相反。人生不是一個線性的過程:努力再努力,努力考試,努力進個好大學,努力找工作,然後努力在工作崗位上燃燒自己的思維模式讓許多人的天賦一生掩埋著無法發光。
被譽為『世界的教育部長』的 Ken Robinson 呼籲大家:現在全世界都在修補殘破的教育體系,但改善一個殘骸效果有限,我們需要一場學習革命!在Ken Robinsons心目中,理想的教育方式是有機而共創的,每個人都能發展適合自己的方法,但擁有能配合的外在幫助和資源。
2014年3月4日 星期二
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